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Cerebral Autoregulation in Neurodegeneration

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Cerebral Autoregulation in Neurodegeneration

Overview

Cerebral Autoregulation in Neurodegeneration describes the intrinsic ability of cerebral blood vessels to maintain stable blood flow despite changes in systemic blood pressure, and how this mechanism becomes impaired in neurodegenerative diseases. This page provides a detailed mechanistic model connecting blood pressure dysregulation to neurodegeneration through autoregulatory failure.

Cerebral autoregulation is a critical homeostatic mechanism that protects the brain from both hypoperfusion (insufficient blood flow) and hyperperfusion (excessive blood flow) by dynamically adjusting cerebrovascular resistance[@van2012]. This protection is especially important in the brain, which lacks significant energy reserves and requires constant perfusion to maintain metabolic demands. In neurodegenerative diseases, autoregulatory mechanisms become impaired, leaving the brain vulnerable to blood pressure fluctuations and accelerating pathological processes[@claassen2022].

Physiological Basis of Cerebral Autoregulation

The Autoregulation Curve

Cerebral autoregulation maintains relatively constant cerebral blood flow (CBF) across a wide range of systemic blood pressures, typically spanning mean arterial pressures (MAP) from approximately 60 to 150 mmHg[@van2012]. This relationship is characterized by:

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