Journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism : official journal of the International Society of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism
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J. Cereb. Blood Flow Metab. · Jun 1986
Brain luxury perfusion during cardiopulmonary bypass in humans. A study of the cerebral blood flow response to changes in CO2, O2, and blood pressure.
CBF and related parameters were studied in 68 patients before, during, and following cardiopulmonary bypass. CBF was measured using the intraarterial 133Xe injection method. The extracorporeal circuit was nonpulsatile with a bubble oxygenator administering 3-5% CO2 in the main group of hypercapnic patients (n = 59) and no CO2 in a second group of hypocapnic patients. ⋯ The degree of hemodilution neither affected the CO2 response nor impaired CBF autoregulation, although, as would be expected, it influenced CBF: In 33 women CBF was 55 ml/100 g/min at an Htc of 24%, as compared with 42 ml/100 g/min in 35 men (Htc = 28%). High PaO2 was a vasoconstrictor, the autoregulatory plateau being narrowed. The lower limit of autoregulation was shifted to a higher pressure when PaO2 was low.