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Cerebral Blood Flow

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opthalmic artery & external carotid. surface branches of anterior, middle, posterior ... Anterior cerebral artery. Motor distrubance contralateral distal leg ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cerebral Blood Flow


1
Cerebral Blood Flow Stroke
  • Lecture 27

2
Cerebral Circulation
  • Blood flow to CNS
  • delivers O2, glucose, nutrients
  • removes C O2, lactic acid, metabolites
  • Cerebral vasculature
  • unique anatomy physiology
  • safety mechanisms
  • Brain highly vulnerable to disrupted blood flow

3
Stroke
  • CVA cerebrovascular accident
  • Failure of safety mechanisms
  • 3 cause of death for U.S. adults
  • 1 cause of chronic functional incapacity
  • about 2 million adults

4
CVAs
  • neurological symptoms and signs
  • usually focal
  • localized
  • acute
  • sudden onset
  • result from diseases involving blood vessels.

5
Causes of CVAs
  • cardiac disease
  • trauma
  • infection
  • neoplasm (tumor)
  • exogenous toxins
  • arterio-venous malformations (AVMs)

6
Types of CVAs
  • Occlusive CVA
  • due to the closure of a blood vessel -
  • usually due to atherosclerosis thrombosis.
  • Hemorrhagic CVA
  • due to bleeding from a blood vessel
  • usually due to either hypertension or an
    aneurysm.

7
Stroke Ischemia
  • Insufficiency of blood supply
  • Glucose O2 deprivation, build-up of wastes
  • NOT synonymous Anoxia
  • O2 deprivation only
  • Few seconds little or no damage
  • 6-8 minutes ---gt Infarction
  • neurons other cells die

8
Blood Supply of Brain
  • Arises from aortic arch
  • 2 common carotid arteries
  • (extracranial)
  • give rise to external internal carotid
  • 2 vertebral arteries

9
anterior cerebral
middle cerebral
Posterior cerebral
basilar
internal carotid
vertebral
external carotid
aortic arch
10
Blood Supply Arterial Territories
  • Internal carotid arteries
  • supply each cerebral hemisphere
  • branches
  • anterior cerebral artery
  • middle cerebral artery
  • anterior choroidal artery

11
Anterior Cerebral Arteries
  • Surface branches supply cortex and white
    matter of
  • inferior frontal lobe
  • medial surface of the frontal and parietal lobes
  • anterior corpus callosum

12
Anterior Cerebral Arteries
  • Penetrating branches supply
  • deeper cerebrum
  • diencephalon
  • limbic structures
  • head of caudate
  • anterior limb of internal capsule

13
Middle Cerebral Arteries
  • Surface branches supply
  • cortex white matter of hemispheric convexity
  • (all four lobes and insula).
  • Penetrating branches
  • deep white matter
  • some diencephalic structures

14
Anterior Choroidal Arteries
  • Supply
  • anterior hippocampus
  • posterior limb of the internal capsule

15
Vertebral Arteries
  • Rise from subclavian artery
  • Branches
  • anterior spinal arteries
  • posterior inferior cerebellar arteries.
  • 2 vertebral arteries join at the junction of the
    pons and medulla
  • form basilar artery
  • basilar divides into 2 posterior cerebral
    arteries.

16
Posterior Cerebral Arteries
  • Surface branches supply
  • cortex and white matter of medial occipital lobes
  • inferior temporal lobes
  • posterior corpus callosum
  • Penetrating branches supply
  • parts of the thalamus
  • parts of the midbrain

17
Cerebral Artery Areas
1. anterior cerebral 2. Middle cerebral 3.
Penetrating branches of middle cerebral 4.
anterior choroidal 5. Posterior cerebral
18
Anastomoses
  • Interconnections between blood vessels
  • overlapping blood supply
  • safety mechanism
  • retrograde filling
  • e.g., circle of Willis
  • Others between...
  • opthalmic artery external carotid
  • surface branches of anterior, middle, posterior

19
Functions of Cortical Areas
20
Frontal lobe
  • Prefrontal lobes
  • anterior to motor cortex
  • weigh consequences of future action and plan
    accordingly (an executive function)
  • performance of delayed responses
  • Inferior frontal lobes
  • emotional responding

21
Frontal lobe
  • Precentral gyri
  • control contalateral movement
  • Broca's area (L. Hemi.)
  • language production
  • R. Hemi. may be more involved in music
    production.

22
Parietal lobe
  • Postcentral gyrus
  • Anterior parietal lobe
  • primary somatosensory cortex (S1)
  • Posterior parietal cortex (PPC)
  • higher-order sensory areas
  • convergence from other sensory systems
  • left parietal lobe reading and writing
  • right parietal lobe spatial information.

23
Temporal lobe
  • Language object recognition
  • memory
  • L. Hemi. verbal information
  • R. Hemi. nonverbal information
  • Inferior temporal lobes
  • higher-order visual perception

24
Temporal lobe
  • Superior temporal gyrus
  • primary auditory cortex (A1)
  • Superior temporal lobe
  • L. Hemi. language comprehension
  • R. Hemi. music comprehension
  • except trained musicians

25
Occipital Lobe
  • Analysis of visual information.
  • Primary visual cortex (V1)
  • Visual association cortex
  • color
  • movement
  • shape

26
Infarction in the territories of the cerebral
arteries
27
Middle cerebral artery
  • Most common stroke syndrome.
  • contralateral weakness
  • face, arm, and hand more than legs
  • contralateral sensory loss
  • face, arm, and hand more than legs
  • visual field cut
  • damage to optic radiations

28
Middle Cerebral Artery
  • Aphasia language disturbances
  • more likely with L. Hemi. damage
  • especially men
  • Broca's production
  • Wernicke's comprehension

29
Middle Cerebral Artery
  • Impaired spatial perception
  • more likely after R. Hemi. damage
  • spatial neglect
  • dressing apraxia
  • constructional apraxia
  • topographagnosia

30
Anterior cerebral artery
  • Motor distrubance contralateral distal leg
  • urinary incontinence
  • speech disturbance (may be more of a motor
    problem)
  • apraxia of left arm (sympathetic apraxia) if
    anterior corpus callosum is affected
  • If bilateral may cause apathy, motor inertia, and
    muteness

31
Posterior Cerebral Artery
  • Visual disturbances
  • contralateral homonymous hemianopsia
  • (central vision is often spared)
  • L. Hemi lesions alexia
  • (with or without agraphia)
  • Bilateral lesions cortical blindness
  • patients unaware they cannot see
  • (Anton's syndrome)
  • Memory impairment if temporal lobe is affected

32
Posterior Cerebral Artery
  • Proximal occlusion
  • contralateral hemisensory loss,
  • spontaneous pain and dysesthesia if thalamus
    affected
  • (thalamic pain syndrome)
  • contralateral severe proximal chorea
  • (hemiballism)

33
Treatment
  • Pharmacologic
  • anticoagulants
  • vasodilators
  • antihypertensives
  • steroids
  • antagonism of excitatory amino acid neurotoxicity

34
Treatment
  • Surgery
  • remove aneurysms
  • remove pressure following hemorrhage
  • Radiation to treat AVMs
  • Embolization therapy to
  • plug vessels of an AVM
  • or to treat an aneurysm
  • (direct surgery usually preferable)

35
Stroke Rescue?
  • Cell transplant - experimental
  • Inject immature nerve cells
  • grown from human cancer cells
  • Cells mature ---gt bridge damaged areas
  • Rats function restored
  • Human June 23, 1998
  • no ill effects
  • no recovery yet
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