Abstract

Neonatal and adult strokes are more common in the left than in the right cerebral hemisphere in the middle cerebral arterial territory, and adult extracranial and intracranial vessels are systematically left-dominant. The aim of the research reported here was to determine whether the asymmetric vascular ground plan found in adults was present in healthy term neonates (n = 97). A new transcranial Doppler ultrasonography dual-view scanning protocol, with concurrent B-flow and pulsed wave imaging, acquired multivariate data on the neonatal middle cerebral arterial structure and function. This study documents for the first-time systematic asymmetries in the middle cerebral artery origin and distal trunk of healthy term neonates and identifies commensurately asymmetric hemodynamic vulnerabilities. A systematic leftward arterial dominance was found in the arterial caliber and cortically directed blood flow. The endothelial wall shear stress was also asymmetric across the midline and varied according to vessels’ geometry. We conclude that the arterial structure and blood supply in the brain are laterally asymmetric in newborns. Unfavorable shearing forces, which are a by-product of the arterial asymmetries described here, might contribute to a greater risk of cerebrovascular pathology in the left hemisphere.

Highlights

  • Cerebral arterial diameters and blood flows have been investigated in neonates for a variety of largely clinical ends

  • Studies of diameters are restricted to autopsy series [28,29]

  • Blood flow velocity is commonly measured in vivo for routine clinical purposes [30,31,32,33,34,35]

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Summary

Introduction

Adult studies report left-biased asymmetries in the structure and hemodynamics of extracranial and intracranial arteries, namely, the vertebral arteries [5,6], common and internal carotid arteries [7], and middle and anterior cerebral arteries [8]. These reports of larger arterial calibers, higher flow velocities, and higher blood flow volumes on the left are in keeping with the notion of a more resource intensive left hemisphere [9] and create left–right differences in the circulations of each arterial tree

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