4.5 Article

Quantification of arterial, venous, and cerebrospinal fluid flow dynamics by magnetic resonance imaging under simulated micro-gravity conditions: a prospective cohort study

Journal

FLUIDS AND BARRIERS OF THE CNS
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12987-021-00238-3

Keywords

Spaceflight‐ associated neuro‐ ocular syndrome; Head‐ down tilt; Arterial; venous; cerebrospinal fluid dynamics; Simulated microgravity

Categories

Funding

  1. Georgia CTSA [TL1TR002382, UL1TR002378]
  2. NASA [NNX16AT06G]
  3. Georgia Research Alliance (CRE)

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The study revealed that simulated microgravity had effects on cerebrovascular flow dynamics, resulting in decreased cerebrospinal fluid flow variables and cerebral arterial flow, while also causing an increase in cerebral venous cross-sectional area.
Background Astronauts undergoing long-duration spaceflight are exposed to numerous health risks, including Spaceflight-Associated Neuro-Ocular Syndrome (SANS), a spectrum of ophthalmic changes that can result in permanent loss of visual acuity. The etiology of SANS is not well understood but is thought to involve changes in cerebrovascular flow dynamics in response to microgravity. There is a paucity of knowledge in this area; in particular, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) flow dynamics have not been well characterized under microgravity conditions. Our study was designed to determine the effect of simulated microgravity (head-down tilt [HDT]) on cerebrovascular flow dynamics. We hypothesized that microgravity conditions simulated by acute HDT would result in increases in CSF pulsatile flow. Methods In a prospective cohort study, we measured flow in major cerebral arteries, veins, and CSF spaces in fifteen healthy volunteers using phase contrast magnetic resonance (PCMR) before and during 15 degrees HDT. Results We found a decrease in all CSF flow variables [systolic peak flow (p = 0.009), and peak-to-peak pulse amplitude (p = 0.001)]. Cerebral arterial average flow (p = 0.04), systolic peak flow (p = 0.04), and peak-to-peak pulse amplitude (p = 0.02) all also significantly decreased. We additionally found a decrease in average cerebral arterial flow (p = 0.040). Finally, a significant increase in cerebral venous cross-sectional area under HDT (p = 0.005) was also observed. Conclusions These results collectively demonstrate that acute application of -15 degrees HDT caused a reduction in CSF flow variables (systolic peak flow and peak-to-peak pulse amplitude) which, when coupled with a decrease in average cerebral arterial flow, systolic peak flow, and peak-to-peak pulse amplitude, is consistent with a decrease in cardiac-related pulsatile CSF flow. These results suggest that decreases in cerebral arterial inflow were the principal drivers of decreases in CSF pulsatile flow.

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