Home

ischaemic

Ischaemic describes a state in which blood flow to a tissue, organ, or region is reduced or blocked, resulting in insufficient oxygen and nutrients for normal metabolism. It can be focal or global and may be acute or chronic. If perfusion is not restored, the affected tissue can sustain injury and, with ongoing deprivation, may progress to infarction.

Common examples include myocardial ischaemia (reduced blood flow to the heart muscle), cerebral ischaemia (reduced brain

Causes include atherosclerotic narrowing of arteries, thrombus formation, embolic occlusion, vasospasm, systemic hypotension, and microvascular dysfunction.

Pathophysiology involves an imbalance between oxygen supply and demand. Reduced inflow prompts anaerobic metabolism, lactate accumulation,

Diagnosis relies on clinical presentation supplemented by targeted testing. Myocardial ischaemia is assessed with ECG changes

Management aims to restore perfusion and treat underlying causes. In the heart, antiplatelet or anticoagulant therapy

perfusion),
and
ischaemia
affecting
the
abdomen,
kidneys,
or
limbs.
Myocardial
ischaemia
can
present
as
chest
pain
or
dyspnoea;
cerebral
ischaemia
can
cause
stroke
symptoms
or
transient
ischaemic
attacks.
Chronic
ischaemia
often
results
from
progressive
arterial
disease,
whereas
acute
ischaemia
typically
arises
from
sudden
occlusion
by
a
clot
or
embolus.
and
acidosis,
leading
to
cellular
injury.
If
blood
flow
is
not
promptly
restored,
injury
may
become
irreversible.
Reperfusion
after
occlusion
can
also
cause
additional
injury.
and
cardiac
enzymes;
cerebral
ischaemia
is
evaluated
with
imaging
such
as
CT
or
MRI
and
vascular
studies;
peripheral
ischaemia
uses
Doppler
ultrasound
and
imaging
to
identify
occlusions
or
stenoses.
and
revascularisation;
in
the
brain,
thrombolysis
or
mechanical
thrombectomy
when
appropriate;
in
limbs
or
viscera,
surgical
or
endovascular
revascularisation.
Prevention
focuses
on
risk-factor
modification
and
prompt
recognition
to
reduce
the
risk
of
infarction
and
disability.