4.1 Article

Dynamic cerebrovascular autoregulation in patients prone to postural syncope: Comparison of techniques assessing the autoregulation index from spontaneous variability series

Journal

AUTONOMIC NEUROSCIENCE-BASIC & CLINICAL
Volume 237, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.autneu.2021.102920

Keywords

Heart rate variability; Arterial pressure; Mean cerebral blood flow velocity; Head-up tilt; Cardiovascular control; Autonomic nervous system

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Funding

  1. Ricerca Corrente from the Italian Ministry of Health

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Three approaches to assess cerebrovascular autoregulation were applied, using the autoregulation index computed from the variability of mean arterial pressure and mean cerebral blood flow velocity. Different methods provided different results, but none indicated significant differences in the dynamic component of cerebrovascular autoregulation between individuals with and without a history of postural syncope.
Three approaches to the assessment of cerebrovascular autoregulation (CA) via the computation of the autoregulation index (ARI) from spontaneous variability of mean arterial pressure (MAP) and mean cerebral blood flow velocity (MCBFV) were applied: 1) a time domain method (TDM); 2) a nonparametric method (nonPM); 3) a parametric method (PM). Performances were tested over matched and surrogate unmatched pairs. Data were analyzed at supine resting (REST) and during the early phase of 60 degrees head-up tilt (TILT) in 13 subjects with previous history of postural syncope (SYNC, age: 28 +/- 9 yrs.; 5 males) and 13 control individuals (noSYNC, age: 27 +/- 8 yrs.; 5 males). Analysis was completed by computing autonomic markers from heart period (HP) and systolic arterial pressure (SAP) variability series via spectral approach. HP and SAP spectral indexes suggested that noSYNC and SYNC groups exhibited different autonomic responses to TILT. ARI analysis indicated that: i) all methods have a sufficient statistical power to separate matched from unmatched pairs with the exception of nonPM applied to impulse response; ii) ARI estimates derived from different methods might be uncorrelated and, even when correlated, might exhibit a significant bias; iii) orthostatic stressor did not induce any evident ARI change in either noSYNC or SYNC individuals; iv) this conclusion held regardless of the method. Methods for the ARI estimation from spontaneous variability provide different ARIs but none indicate that noSYNC and SYNC subjects have different dynamic component of CA.

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