Journal of hepatology
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Journal of hepatology · Aug 1996
Dissociated cerebral vasoparalysis in acute liver failure. A hypothesis of gradual cerebral hyperaemia.
Normally, cerebral blood flow responds to changes in the arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2) but not to changes in mean arterial pressure, commonly referred to as the cerebral CO2-reactivity and autoregulation. In patients with fulminant hepatic failure and in the rat with thioacetamide-induced liver failure, autoregulation is absent, presumably due to cerebral vasoparalysis. Since also CO2-reactivity may then be compromised, it was studied in patients with fulminant hepatic failure and rats with thioacetamide-induced liver failure. ⋯ The finding that cerebral CO2 reactivity is reduced in hypercapnia, while it is preserved in hypocapnia, suggests that gradual dilation of the cerebral resistance vessels develops in fulminant hepatic failure and connects previous morphological studies with changes in the regulation of cerebral blood flow, i.e. impaired cerebral autoregulation and blunted CO2-reactivity.