4.5 Article

Frontal cerebral oxygenation asymmetry: intersubject variability and dependence on systemic physiology, season, and time of day

Journal

NEUROPHOTONICS
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

SPIE-SOC PHOTO-OPTICAL INSTRUMENTATION ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1117/1.NPh.7.2.025006

Keywords

functional near-infrared spectroscopy; prefrontal cortex; right-left asymmetry; tissue oxygenation; systemic physiology

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Significance: Our study reveals that frontal cerebral oxygenation asymmetry (FCOA), i.e. a difference in the oxygenation between the right and left prefrontal cortex (PFC), is a real phenomenon in healthy human subjects at rest. Aim: To investigate FCOA, we performed a study with 134 healthy right-handed subjects with the systemic physiology augmented functional near infrared spectroscopy (SPA-fNIRS) approach. Approach: Subjects were measured 2 to 4 times on different days resulting in an unprecedented number of 518 single measurements of the absolute values of tissue oxygen saturation (StO(2)) and total hemoglobin concentration ([tHb]) of the right and left PFC. Measurements were performed with frequency-domain functional near-infrared spectroscopy. In addition, the cardiorespiratory parameters were measured simultaneously. Results: We found that (i) subjects showed an FCOA (higher StO(2) on the right PFC), but not for tHb; (ii) intrasubject variability was excellent for both StO(2) and tHb, and fair for FCOA; (iii) StO(2) correlated significantly with blood CO2 concentration, [tHb] with heart rate, respiration rate (RR), and the pulse-respiration quotient (PRQ), and FCOA with RR and PRQ; (iv) FCOA and StO(2) were dependent on season and time of day, respectively; (v) FCOA was negatively correlated with the room temperature; and (vi) StO(2) and tHb were not correlated with the subjects mood but with their chronotype, whereas FCOA was not dependent on the chronotype. Conclusion: Our study demonstrates that FCOA is real, and it provides unique insights into this remarkable phenomenon. (C) The Authors. Published by SPIE under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported License.

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