Abstract

The early physiopathologic responses to transection of the cervical spinal cord (C-4) were studied in the experimental animal. After transection, increases were seen in the mean arterial pressure, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, intracranial pressure, brain water, blood-brain barrier permeability, and extravascular lung water with a marked decrease occurring in cerebral blood flow. Pretreatment with an α-adrenergic blocker, phentolamine (Regitine Ciba-Geigy Corp.), followed by transection blocked the rise in mean arterial blood pressure and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure but did not affect the increases in intracranial pressure, brain water, blood-brain barrier permeability, and extravascular lung water and decreases in cerebral blood flow. Transection of the cervical spinal cord initiates a complex series of events involving intracranial compliance and pulmonary permeability, placing both brain and lungs at risk.

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