Acute Changes in Blood Pressure Following Vascular Diseases in the Brain Stem
- 1 January 1973
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Stroke
- Vol. 4 (1), 80-84
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.str.4.1.80
Abstract
The relationship of the type of acute change in blood pressure to the site of the brain lesion, following cerebral hemorrhage and infarction, were studied in 108 patients in whom autopsy was performed. No significant changes in blood pressure were observed in cases with lesions localized rostral to the midbrain and in the medulla oblongata. The pressor response characteristic in primary pontine lesions, either hemorrhage or infarction, also was demonstrated in the cerebral hemorrhage with fourth ventricular and pontine extension. Blood pressure elevation was more marked with tegmental pontine lesions than when the lesion was in the basilar pons. Extension of the lesion into neighboring portions of the pons did not cause further change in blood pressure. The present results seem to suggest a positive role of the caudal brain stem, especially the pons, in the blood pressure elevation following the cerebrovascular accidents.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hypothalamic Vasopressor and Vesicopressor PathwaysArchives of Neurology, 1967
- 5. Role of the Brain Stem in Pathogenesis of HypertensionJapanese Circulation Journal, 1966
- BILATERAL OPHTHALMOPLEGIA IN BASILAR-VERTEBRAL ARTERY DISEASEBrain, 1965
- Dissociation of Facilitatory Mechanisms in the Midpontile Decerebrate CatNature, 1965
- The natural history of internal carotid and vertebral‐basilar artery occlusionNeurology, 1961
- Brain stem augmentation of cardiovascular activityAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1960
- The sympathetic vasodilator outflow — A cortico‐spinal autonomic pathwayJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1956
- PRIMARY PONTILE HEMORRHAGEJournal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 1951
- The hypothalamusErgebnisse der Physiologie Biologischen Chemie und Experimentellen Pharmakologie, 1939