Stroke; a journal of cerebral circulation
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Following 5 minutes of global ischemia, local cerebral blood flow (LCBF) was shown to have an initial reactive hyperemia that was followed, within the first hour, by persistent hypoperfusion (Part I). Intracranial pressure (ICP) was never elevated during the period of poor reperfusion. These experiments attempted to reverse the state of subnormal LCBF by inducing hypercarbia or hyocarbia or maintaining normocarbia. ⋯ Hypercarbia was consistently more effective in elevating LCBFs and in recovery of the electrocorticogram. It appears that, in the absence of raised ICP, hypercarbia may be preferred to normal or low PACO2,. Even though hypercarbia was superior to normocarbia or hypocarbia, hypercarbia was not a completely satisfactory regimen for reversing the state of poor reperfusion.
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In cats air embolism of the brain was produced by injecting 0.6 ml blood foam into the innominate artery proximal to the origin of both common carotid arteries. Air embolism caused transient ischemia of the brain, reaching a maximum within 1 min after injection. Resolution of the air embolism began a few minutes later and was completed within 15 min in the center and within 30 min in the border zone of the main supplying arteries. ⋯ Immediately after embolism, the EEG flattened and oxygen consumption decreased. After normalization of flow, oxygen consumption returned to normal, but EEG only partially recovered. Air embolism had little effect on the water and electrolyte content of the brain, and produced very little damage to the blood-brain barrier.
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The problem of early differentiation of "traumatic tap" from subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) was studied in the rabbit by determining the changes in percentage of hemolysis and in lactate concentrations in CSF within the first twenty-four hours following induced SAH. The 0.3 to 7% hemolysis which occurred was relatively independent both of the time following SAH and of the number of red blood cells (rbc) in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). There was, on the other hand, a significant and time-dependent increase in CSF lactate concentration early after SAH, suggesting the potential clinical value of the detection of increased lactate with a relatively normal lactate/pyruvate ratio in hemorrhagic CSF. Until this can be evaluated in human subjects, however, determination of the rbc counts or total hemoglobin concentrations in serially collected samples of CSF remains the best clinical method.