Abstract

Ischemic stroke is a leading cause of death and disability. Autoregulation and collateral blood flow through the circle of Willis both play a role in preventing tissue infarction. A steady-state model of the cerebral arterial network was used to investigate the interaction of these mechanisms when autoregulation is impaired ipsilateral to an occluded artery. Twelve structural variants of the circle of Willis were modelled with left internal carotid artery occlusion and coupled with (1) a passive model of the cerebral vascular bed, (2) a steady-state model of an autoregulating cerebral vascular bed, and (3) a model in which the contralateral hemisphere autoregulates and the ipsilateral hemisphere does not. Results showed that if the autoregulatory response is impaired ipsilaterally, then, in the autoregulating hemisphere, cerebral flows are preserved at the expense of those on the ipsilateral side. Thus, although autoregulation is an essential facilitator of collateral flow through the circle of Willis, contralateral autoregulation can exacerbate flow reductions if not balanced by the same response in the vascular beds on the ipsilateral side. The status of the autoregulatory response in both hemispheres can strongly influence cerebral blood flows and tissue survival and should, therefore, be monitored in stroke.

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