Benign oligaemia

Last revised by Giulia Carpani on 8 Dec 2024

Benign oligaemia occurs when the brain's ability to autoregulate cerebral blood flow (CBF) by vasodilation is exceeded and cerebral blood flow begins to reduce. If this reduction is left unchecked, eventually neurological dysfunction and eventual infarction will occur. 

There is, however, a window wherein brain tissue continues to function normally and can remain mildly hypoperfused indefinitely without progressing to infarction; this is termed benign oligaemia.

Distinguishing between benign oligaemia and ischaemic penumbra is not trivial and is important if the true "at risk" penumbra volume is to be accurately characterised 1. Both overestimating and underestimating the region that represents benign oligaemia is problematic as patients may be under or over treated. 

Cases and figures

  • Figure 1
:

Updating… Please wait.

 Unable to process the form. Check for errors and try again.

 Thank you for updating your details.