4.4 Article

Ageing affects the balance between central and peripheral mechanisms of cerebrovascular regulation with increasing influence of systolic blood pressure levels

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 119, Issue 2, Pages 519-529

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00421-018-4036-3

Keywords

Ageing; Sex; Cerebral autoregulation; Arterial baroreflex; Autonomic nervous system

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BackgroundArterial baroreflex (BR) and cerebral autoregulation (CA) are two major regulatory mechanisms that maintain constant cerebral perfusion. Little is known about the interplay between these mechanisms, particularly when considering the effects of ageing or sex.PurposeWe studied the relationship between dynamic CA and BR sensitivity (BRS) in healthy subjects by sex and in different age strata.Methods95 healthy adults (52% female), 20-80 years-old, were recruited. Arterial blood pressure (Finometer), 3-lead electrocardiogram and cerebral blood flow velocity in middle cerebral arteries (transcranial Doppler) were monitored. We assessed CA by transfer function analysis and BRS in frequency and time domain.ResultsWith increasing age, BRS diminished (ANCOVA R-2=0.281, p<0.001) but CA parameters did not change significantly (p>0.05). Overall, there was an inverse relationship between the efficacy of BRS and CA low-frequency gain [multivariate linear regression =0.41 (0.31; 0.61), p<0.001]. However, this association suffers changes with ageing: in older subjects BRS and CA were not correlated [=0.10 (-0.41; 0.62), p=0.369]. Instead, decreasing systolic blood pressure correlated with less efficient CA [lower CA low-frequency gain = -0.02 (-0.03; -0.02), p=0.003]. Sex did not affect BRS and CA relationship.ConclusionsCerebral blood supply is governed by a tuned balance between BR and CA which is lost with age as BRS decreases dramatically. Low systolic blood pressure values might be harmful to older subjects as they might reduce the ability to keep cerebral blood flow tightly controlled.

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