Affiliation:
1. Australian School of Advanced Medicine, Macquarie University, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Abstract
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Maintaining flow in a newly established high-flow bypass into the intracranial circulation may be threatened by low blood pressure.
OBJECTIVE:
To identify mean arterial blood pressure below which early graft failure may ensue.
METHODS:
Computational fluid dynamic blood flow simulation and Doppler ultrasound–derived velocities were combined to study 12 patients with common carotid–to–intracranial (internal carotid artery in 9 and middle cerebral artery in 3) arterial brain bypass with interposition of the saphenous vein. Patients underwent carotid duplex and high-resolution computed tomography angiography to obtain the necessary data. A mean time-averaged pressure gradient across both anastomoses of the graft was then calculated.
RESULTS:
The bypass graft mean blood flow ± SD was 180.3 ± 76.2 mL/min (95% confidence interval: 132–229). The mean time-averaged pressure gradient ± SD across the bypass graft was 10.2 ± 8.7 mm Hg (95% confidence interval: 4.6-15.7). This compared with a mean pressure gradient ± SD on the contralateral carotid of 21.7 ± 13.8 mm Hg. From these data, the minimum mean ± SD systemic pressure necessary to maintain graft flow of at least 40 mL/min was 61.6 ± 2.31 mm Hg, and the mean peak wall shear stress ± SD at the proximal anastomosis was 0.8 ± 0.7 Pa (95% confidence interval: 0.3-1.2).
CONCLUSION:
Early postoperative mean arterial pressure less than approximately 60 mm Hg may induce blood flow in the bypass to decrease to less than 40 mL/min, a flow below which low shear stress may lead to early graft occlusion.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Neurology (clinical),Surgery
Cited by
8 articles.
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