Recovery of the cortical evoked response following temporary middle cerebral artery occlusion in baboons: relation to local blood flow and PO2.
- 1 March 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Stroke
- Vol. 7 (2) , 151-157
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.str.7.2.151
Abstract
The degree of recovery of the somatosensory cortical evoked response following a period (15 to 65 minutes) of partial ischemia, produced by temporary occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (MCA), was assessed in baboons and related to the local tissue blood flow and PO2 before, during and after the occlusion. Flow was measured using the technique of two-minute hydrogen clearance. Failure of complete recovery of the evoked response was associated with significantly greater depths of ischemia and tissue hypoxia during occlusion, and with significantly greater and persisting tissue hypoxia after occlusion, than complete recovery. Complete recovery of the evoked response also was associated with tissue hyperoxia after occlusion. The reduced postocclusive PO2 levels associated with incomplete recovery of the evoked response suggest that reduced perfusion during ischemia was sufficiently severe to cause some degree of irreversible anoxic damage. The effect of a brief (three to ten minutes) period of ventilation with air (instead of oxygen) under such low-flow conditions was to depress the evoked response significantly further; normally perfused brain, however, was unaffected by this procedure. This finding has clinical implications in regard to normobaric oxygen therapy.This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Relationship between the cortical evoked potential and local cortical blood flow following acute middle cerebral artery occlusion in the baboonExperimental Neurology, 1974
- The Influence of Arterial Hypoxia and Unilateral Carotid Artery Occlusion upon Regional Blood Flow and Metabolism in the Rat BrainActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1974
- Cerebral metabolic state following complete compression ischemiaBrain Research, 1974
- Effect of Ischemia on Monoamine Metabolism in the BrainActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1974
- The Clinical Problem: How Much Anoxia-Ischemia Damages the Brain?Archives of Neurology, 1973
- EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF HYPERAEMIC PHENOMENA IN THE CEREBRAL CIRCULATION OF PRIMATESBrain, 1972
- Recovery of Neuronal Function after Prolonged Cerebral IschemiaScience, 1970
- Red Venous Blood: Occurrence and Significance in Ischemic and Nonischemic Cerebral CortexJournal of Neurosurgery, 1969
- THE LUXURY-PERFUSION SYNDROME AND ITS POSSIBLE RELATION TO ACUTE METABOLIC ACIDOSIS LOCALISED WITHIN THE BRAINThe Lancet, 1966
- THE EFFECTS OF ALTERED ARTERIAL TENSIONS OF CARBON DIOXIDE AND OXYGEN ON CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW AND CEREBRAL OXYGEN CONSUMPTION OF NORMAL YOUNG MEN 1Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1948