Cerebral circulation in acute arterial hypertension—protective effects of sympathetic nervous activity
- 1 February 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Acta Physiologica Scandinavica
- Vol. 111 (2) , 193-199
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1748-1716.1981.tb06724.x
Abstract
The cervical sympathetic chain was stimulated electrically at 6 or 3 Hz on 1 side in anesthetized cats. Acute arterial hypertension was induced by ligation of the aorta. Evans blue was given as tracer for protein leakage. Regional blood flow in the brain was determined by using labeled microspheres. At high blood pressures there was a multifocal breakdown of the blood-brain barrier. The regions with breakdown had 10-20 times the normal flow rates. With maintained hypertension, regions which were overperfused at 5 min were still overperfused at 10 min, but there was little addition of new overperfused areas. Normalization of the pressure resulted in almost twice the normal flow rates in previously overperfused regions. The breakdown of the blood-brain barrier was restricted to the non-stimulated side, or more marked on that side. The protective effect of the sympathetic stimulation lasted more than 10 min. Acute arterial hypertension tends to cause forced and long-lasting vasodilation in some areas in the brain, but regions which are resistant to the acute rise have an increase in the vascular tone. Sympathetic activity helps in developing this tone. Normalization of blood pressure results in partial recovery of the vascular tone in previously overperfused regions and normalization in other areas.Keywords
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