학술논문

The Pathophysiology of Collateral Circulation in Acute Ischemic Stroke
Document Type
article
Source
Diagnostics, Vol 13, Iss 14, p 2425 (2023)
Subject
acute ischemic stroke
collateral circulations
penumbra
thrombectomy
intravenous thrombolysis
anterior brain circulation
Medicine (General)
R5-920
Language
English
ISSN
2075-4418
Abstract
Cerebral collateral circulation is a network of blood vessels which stabilizes blood flow and maintains cerebral perfusion whenever the main arteries fail to provide an adequate blood supply, as happens in ischemic stroke. These arterial networks are able to divert blood flow to hypoperfused cerebral areas. The extent of the collateral circulation determines the volume of the salvageable tissue, the so-called “penumbra”. Clinically, this is associated with greater efficacy of reperfusion therapies (thrombolysis and thrombectomy) in terms of better short- and long-term functional outcomes, lower incidence of hemorrhagic transformation and of malignant oedema, and smaller cerebral infarctions. Recent advancements in brain imaging techniques (CT and MRI) allow us to study these anastomotic networks in detail and increase the likelihood of making effective therapeutic choices. In this narrative review we will investigate the pathophysiology, the clinical aspects, and the possible diagnostic and therapeutic role of collateral circulation in acute ischemic stroke.