Show pageBacklinksCite current pageExport to PDFBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Cerebral blood flow ====== {{rss>https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/rss/search/1XWEJfKtgOHgBLGKNAILXrCwnyr0qIqcwfG2-5j2fC6Fo7W10i/?limit=15&utm_campaign=pubmed-2&fc=20250624172536}} Cerebral [[blood flow]] ([[CBF]]) is the blood supply to the [[brain]] in a given period of time. In an adult, CBF is typically 750 millilitres per minute or 15% of the cardiac output. This equates to an average perfusion of 50 to 54 millilitres of blood per 100 grams of brain tissue per minute. ===== 🧠Comparison: Cerebral Blood Flow Testing vs Monitoring ===== ^ Term ^ Definition ^ Temporal Nature ^ Purpose ^ Example Tools ^ | **[[Cerebral Blood Flow Testing]]** | One-time or episodic assessment of cerebral perfusion to answer a specific diagnostic question. | Snapshot / Single time point | Diagnosis or confirmation (e.g. brain death, no cerebral perfusion in TA-NRP) | CT/MR perfusion, radionuclide scan, transcranial Doppler (spot), angiography | | **[[Cerebral Blood Flow Monitoring]]** | Continuous or repeated observation of cerebral perfusion over time. | Ongoing / Real-time or repeated | Trend analysis, intraoperative safety, critical care surveillance | Continuous TCD, cerebral NIRS, brain tissue oxygen sensors | ---- **Key distinction**: *Cerebral blood flow testing* provides a diagnostic snapshot. *Cerebral blood flow monitoring* tracks changes over time for clinical management. ===== Cerebral blood flow regulation ===== [[Cerebral blood flow regulation]] cerebral_blood_flow.txt Last modified: 2025/06/24 21:25by administrador