Passive (papaverine induced) and active (spontaneous pressure induced) biomechanical properties of ischemic and nonischemic rat middle cerebral arteries (MCAs) were studied under pressurized conditions in vitro. Ischemic (1 h of occlusion), contralateral, and sham-operated control MCAs were isolated from male Wistar rats (n = 22) and pressurized using an arteriograph system that allowed control of transmural pressure (TMP) and measurement of lumen diameter and wall thickness. Three mechanical stiffness parameters were computed: overall passive stiffness (P), pressure-dependent modulus changes (E-inc,E-p), and smooth muscle cell (SMC) activity-dependent changes (E-inc,E-a). The beta-value for ischemic vessels was increased compared with sham vessels (13.9 +/- 1.7 vs. 9.1 +/- 1.4, P < 0.05), indicating possible short-term remodeling due to ischemia. E-inc,E-p increased with pressure in the passive vessels (P < 0.05) but remained relatively constant in the active vessels for all vessel types, indicating that pressure-induced SMC contractile activity (i.e., myogenic reactivity) in cerebral arteries leads to the maintenance of a constant elastic modulus within the autoregulatory pressure range. E-inc,E-a increased with pressure for all conditions, signifying that changes in stiffness are influenced by SMC activity and vascular tone.