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Dynamics of cerebral blood flow regulation explained using a lumped parameter model

Authors :
Olufsen, Mette S.
Nadim, Ali
Lipsitz, Lewis A.
Source :
The American Journal of Physiology. Feb, 2002, Vol. 282 Issue 2, pR611, 12 p.
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

Dynamics of cerebral blood flow regulation explained using a lumped parameter model. Am J Physiol Regulatory Integrative Comp Physiol 282: R611-R622, 2002; 10.1152/ajpregu. 00285.2001.--The dynamic cerebral blood flow response to sudden hypotension during posture change is poorly understood. To better understand the cardiovascular response to hypotension, we used a windkessel model with two resistors and a capacitor to reproduce beat-to-beat changes in middle cerebral artery blood flow velocity (transcranial Doppler measurements) in response to arterial pressure changes measured in the finger (Finapres). The resistors represent lumped systemic and peripheral resistances in the cerebral vasculature, whereas the capacitor represents a lumped systemic compliance. Ten healthy young subjects were studied during posture change from sitting to standing. Dynamic variations of the peripheral and systemic resistances were extracted from the data on a beat-to-beat basis. The model shows an initial increase, followed approximately 10 s later by a decline in cerebrovascular resistance. The model also suggests that the initial increase in cerebrovascular resistance can explain the widening of the cerebral blood flow pulse observed in young subjects. This biphasic change in cerebrovascular resistance is consistent with an initial vasoconstriction, followed by cerebral autoregulatory vasodilation. cerebral autoregulation; arterial modeling

Details

ISSN :
00029513
Volume :
282
Issue :
2
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
The American Journal of Physiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.84539851