Cerebral Autoregulation
Cross-source consensus on Cerebral Autoregulation from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
How it works
Risks & contraindications
Other
Highlighted claims
- MAPopt is defined as the MAP at the lowest point of the autoregulation curve. — PRECISION study: impact of personalised cardiac anaesthesia and cerebral autoregulation on neurological outcomes in patients undergoing cardiac surgery – protocol for an international, multicentre, prospective cohort study
- Cerebral autoregulation maintains cerebral blood flow despite changes in perfusion pressure. — PRECISION study: impact of personalised cardiac anaesthesia and cerebral autoregulation on neurological outcomes in patients undergoing cardiac surgery – protocol for an international, multicentre, prospective cohort study
- When MAP is within the autoregulation range, cerebral blood flow is relatively independent of MAP. — PRECISION study: impact of personalised cardiac anaesthesia and cerebral autoregulation on neurological outcomes in patients undergoing cardiac surgery – protocol for an international, multicentre, prospective cohort study
- PRECISION measures cerebral haemodynamic insults by both magnitude and duration of MAP deviations from personalised cerebral autoregulation thresholds. — PRECISION study: impact of personalised cardiac anaesthesia and cerebral autoregulation on neurological outcomes in patients undergoing cardiac surgery – protocol for an international, multicentre, prospective cohort study
- MAP below the lower limit of autoregulation may produce pressure-passive perfusion and hypoperfusion. — PRECISION study: impact of personalised cardiac anaesthesia and cerebral autoregulation on neurological outcomes in patients undergoing cardiac surgery – protocol for an international, multicentre, prospective cohort study
- MAP above the upper limit of autoregulation may produce hyperperfusion. — PRECISION study: impact of personalised cardiac anaesthesia and cerebral autoregulation on neurological outcomes in patients undergoing cardiac surgery – protocol for an international, multicentre, prospective cohort study