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Query: UMLS:C0020440 (
hypercapnia
)
7,939
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The cerebral haemodynamic effects of CT 1341 also called Alfatesin, an anaesthetic steroid, were studied in the cat by means of the
Xenon
133 isotopic clearance method to measure the cerebral blood flow. The injection or intravenous drip of Alfatesin in animals whose arterio PCO2 was kept unchanged induced a cerebral blood flow diminution, the importance of which was proportional to the injected dose. The cerebral blood flow fall was partly due to a cerebral arterio vasoconstriction evidenced by direct observation of the cortex vessels and by a diminution of the intracranial presure. During a deep anaesthesia induced by Alfatesin with recurrent burst suppression, there was a loss of cerebral blood flow autoregulation while the CO2 cerebral vascular reactivity was maintained. This last result accounts for the increase in cerebral blood flow parallel to the
hypercapnia
that could be observed among animals breathing freely.
...
PMID:[Study of the effects of Alfatesin on cerebral blood flow in cats]. 0 57
Regional cerebral blood flow was simultaneously determined using the stable xenon computed tomographic and the radioactive microsphere techniques over a wide range of blood flow rates (less than 10-greater than 300 ml/100 g/min) in 12 baboons under conditions of normocapnia, hypocapnia, and
hypercapnia
. A total of 31 pairs of determinations were made. After anesthetic and surgical preparation of the baboons, cerebral blood flow was repeatedly determined using the stable xenon technique during saturation with 50% xenon in oxygen. Concurrently, cerebral blood flow was determined before and during xenon administration using 15-microns microspheres. In Group 1 (n = 7), xenon and microsphere determinations were made repeatedly during normocapnia. In Group 2 (n = 5), cerebral blood flow was determined using both techniques in each baboon during hypocapnia (PaCO2 = 20 mm Hg), normocapnia (PaCO2 = 40 mm Hg), and
hypercapnia
(PaCO2 = 60 mm Hg).
Xenon
and microsphere values in Group 1 were significantly correlated (r = 0.69, p less than 0.01). In Group 2, values from both techniques also correlated closely across all levels of PaCO2 (r = 0.92, p less than 0.001). No significant differences existed between the slopes or y intercepts of the regression lines for either group and the line of identity. Our data indicate that the stable xenon technique yields cerebral blood flow values that correlate well with values determined using radioactive microspheres across a wide range of cerebral blood flow rates.
...
PMID:Stable xenon versus radiolabeled microsphere cerebral blood flow measurements in baboons. 251 92
Cerebrovascular CO2 reactivity was studied in 40 healthy subjects (HSs) and 40 patients suffering from cerebrovascular disorders (CVD). Transcranial Doppler (TCD) sonography was used to investigate MCA flow velocity modifications during PaCO2 changes induced by ventilatory rate modifications and closed-circuit air re-breathing. HS responses were correlated with age, whereas the roles of either multiple ischemic brain lesions or carotid occlusions were studied in the Pt group. Results were as follows: i) age did not prove to affect vasomotor response to PaCO2 variations; ii) in
hypercapnia
, patients with multifocal ischemic lesions showed an impaired response in both hemispheres, whereas altered vasoreactivity was unilateral in patients with carotid occlusion (and ipsilateral to the thrombosis); iii) no significant differences were found between HS and Pt responses in hypocapnia. These findings confirm previous reports obtained with the 133
Xenon
technique, stressing the usefulness of cerebrovascular reactivity investigation in CVD pts for diagnostic and prognostic purposes.
...
PMID:Pathophysiology of the vasomotor reactivity to hypo- and hypercapnia: role of aging and chronic cerebrovascular disorders. 251 48
In pentobarbital-anesthetized cats, over arterial paCO2 values of 20-60 mm Hg, cerebral blood flow (CBF,
Xenon
) and cardiac output (CO, thermal dilution) show positively inflicted curves with slopes significantly greater than zero. To examine the role of the locus coeruleus (LC) in these responses, bilateral stereotactic thermo-coagulation lesions of the LC were made. The effect of lesions confirmed to involve the LC bilaterally (n = 10), were compared with the effects of misdirected lesions placed in the cerebellum and lateral to the LC (n = 10) and sham lesions (n = 10). Ten days after the lesioning procedure, the animals were re-anesthetized with pentobarbital and paCO2 response curves were determined for CBF and CO prior to and following intravenous administration of propranolol (1 mg/kg, i.v.). The results obtained with the sham-operated animals and the animals with lesions outside of the LC were indistinguishable. Bilateral LC lesions had no significant effect on normocapnic CBF as compared to control animals. They did, however, significantly reduce the slope of the CBF paCO2 response curve. Propranolol produced a significant reduction in CBF in lesioned and non-lesioned animals measured at all levels of pCO2 and did not alter the slope of the pCO2 response curve for any group as compared to predrug values. Bilateral lesions of the LC did not significantly alter either normocapnic CO or the slope of the CO-paCO2 relationship, but did reduce the elevation in mean arterial blood pressure otherwise observed during
hypercarbia
. Measurement of norepinephrine levels in cortex indicate a close correlation between the ability of the lesion to reduce norepinephrine content and produce the observed physiological effects. The results of these experiments suggest that the hypercapnic response of CBF, but not CO to arterial paCO2 is modulated by systems which traverse the dorsal brainstem. The role of the locus coeruleus-catecholamine cell bodies in this effect, however, must be considered speculative until further transmitter-selective interventions are carried out.
...
PMID:Effect in cat of locus coeruleus lesions on the response of cerebral blood flow and cardiac output to altered paCO2. 300 58
Regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) during hypertension and
hypercapnia
was studied in 33 patients with putaminal hemorrhage, using a single photon emission CT by means of
Xenon
133 inhalation method. The results obtained were as follows: 1) A significant relationship was obtained between the impairment of autoregulation, CO2 reactivity and the degree of cerebral ischemia, i. e., in most cases, these vascular responses were impaired in cases of ischemia showing the rCBF decrease over 30 to 40% of normal values. However, there were particular cases with cerebral ischemia of over 30 to 40% in which autoregulation seemed to be preserved in the acute stage, which was considered to be the similar phenomenon as so called "false autoregulation". 2) The cerebrovascular responses such as autoregulation and CO2 reactivity were preserved in cases of less than 50 ml of hematoma volume. In cases with 50 to 74 ml of hematoma volume however, autoregulation and CO2 reactivity were mostly impaired, especially in the affected hemisphere rather than the non-affected, in the period of 1 to 2 months from the onset. Furthermore, the impairment was also involved in both hemispheres if the hematoma was over 75 ml in volume. 3) The cerebrovascular responses were markedly impaired in the region of basal ganglia of the affected hemisphere which corresponded well to the hematoma site. 4) There was a close correlation between the cerebrovascular responses and the activity of daily life (ADL), i. e, the prognosis might be poor in cases with global impairment, but which seemed to be rather good in cases with local impairment. It might be concluded, from the results mentioned above, that the study of autoregulation and CO2 reactivity is probably significant in estimating the pathogenesis and the treatment of cerebral ischemia following hypertensive putaminal hemorrhage.
...
PMID:[A study of cerebrovascular autoregulation and CO2 reactivity in putaminal hemorrhage]. 310 23