Cerebral oxygenation and optimal vascular brain organization

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Abstract

The cerebral vascular network has evolved in such a way so as to minimize transport time and energy expenditure. This is accomplished by a subtle combination of the optimal arrangement of arteries, arterioles and capillaries and the transport mechanisms of convection and diffusion. Elucidating the interaction between cerebral vascular architectonics and the latter physical mechanisms can catalyse progress in treating cerebral pathologies such as stroke, brain tumours, dementia and targeted drug delivery. Here, we show that brain microvascular organization is predicated on commensurate intracapillary oxygen convection and parenchymal diffusion times. Cross-species grey matter results for the rat, cat, rabbit and human reveal very good correlation between the cerebral capillary and tissue mean axial oxygen convective and diffusion time intervals. These findings agree with the constructal principle.

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Hadjistassou, C., Bejan, A., & Ventikos, Y. (2015). Cerebral oxygenation and optimal vascular brain organization. Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 12(107). https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2015.0245

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