Abstract
The "milieu interieur" or "internal environment" of the brain is determined by the glial cells, the cerebrospinal fluid, the blood-brain barrier, the cerebral blood flow, the central regulation of respiration, and the intracranial pressure. Anaesthetic agents and anoxia-ischaemic insult can disrupt this important but vulnerable neuronal environment. Head injury is used as an example of a common insult to the neuronal environment and the principles of management are discussed, using a model of brain physiology and pathophysiology which can be modified to include other clinical situations. © 1980 Canadian Anesthesiologists.
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CITATION STYLE
Wade, J. G. (1980). The “milieu interieur” - A model of brain physiology and pathophysiology. Canadian Anaesthetists’ Society Journal, 27(5), 440–444. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF03007040
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