Cerebral autoregulation is the ability to keep almost constant cerebral
blood flow (CBF) for some range of changing the mean arterial pressure
(MAP). In preterm infants, this range is usually very small, even
absent, and a passive (linear) dependence of CBF on MAP is observed.
Also, variations of the partial CO2 pressure and intracranial/venous
pressure result in fluctuations of CBF. The absence of cerebral
autoregulation may be a cause of intracranial hemorrhages due to
instability of cerebral blood vessels, especially in the so-called
germinal matrix which exists in a developing brain from 22 to 32 weeks
of gestation. In the current paper, a mathematical model of impaired
cerebral autoregulation is extended compared with previous works of the
authors, and a heuristic feedback control that is able to keep
deviations from a nominal CBF within a reasonable range is proposed.
Viability theory is used to prove that this control can successfully
work against a wide range of disturbances.
«
Cerebral autoregulation is the ability to keep almost constant cerebral
blood flow (CBF) for some range of changing the mean arterial pressure
(MAP). In preterm infants, this range is usually very small, even
absent, and a passive (linear) dependence of CBF on MAP is observed.
Also, variations of the partial CO2 pressure and intracranial/venous
pressure result in fluctuations of CBF. The absence of cerebral
autoregulation may be a cause of intracranial hemorrhages due to
instability of cerebral...
»