4.6 Article

Neurovascular Coupling Is Impaired in Hypertensive and Diabetic Subjects Without Symptomatic Cerebrovascular Disease

Journal

FRONTIERS IN AGING NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2021.728007

Keywords

hypertension; diabetes mellitus; neurovascular coupling (NVC); transcranial doppler (TCD); cerebral small vessel disease

Funding

  1. Associacao para o Estudo das Doencas Neurovasculares

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The study found signs of impaired NVC in hypertensive patients, especially with lower cerebral blood flow velocity increment during visual stimulation, suggesting that hypertensive diabetic patients may have more severe cerebrovascular abnormalities. White matter disease burden did not predict worse NVC, and future research should continue to evaluate the potential of NVC assessment as an early marker for CSVD.
The mechanistic link between hypertension, diabetes and cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD) is still poorly understood. We hypothesized that hypertension and diabetes could impair cerebrovascular regulation prior to irreversibly established cerebrovascular disease. In this study, 52 hypertensive patients [54% males; age 64 +/- 11 years; 58% with comorbid diabetes mellitus (DM)] without symptomatic cerebrovascular disease underwent transcranial Doppler (TCD) monitoring in the middle (MCA) and posterior (PCA) cerebral arteries, to assess vasoreactivity to carbon dioxide (VRCO2) and neurovascular coupling (NVC). 1.5T magnetic resonance imaging was also performed and white matter hyperintensity volume was automatically segmented from FLAIR sequences. TCD data from 17 healthy controls were obtained for comparison (47% males; age 60 +/- 16 years). Hypertensive patients showed significant impairment of NVC in the PCA, with reduced increment in cerebral blood flow velocity during visual stimulation (22.4 +/- 9.2 vs. 31.6 +/- 5.7, p < 0.001), as well as disturbed NVC time-varying properties, with slower response (lower rate time: 0.00 +/- 0.02 vs. 0.03 +/- 6.81, p = 0.001), and reduced system oscillation (reduced natural frequency: 0.18 +/- 0.08 vs. 0.22 +/- 0.06, p < 0.001), when compared to controls. VRCO2 remained relatively preserved in MCA and PCA. These results were worse in hypertensive diabetic patients, with lower natural frequency (p = 0.043) than non-diabetic patients. White matter disease burden did not predict worse NVC. These findings suggest that hypertensive diabetic patients may have a precocious impairment of NVC, already occurring without symptomatic CSVD. Future research is warranted to evaluate whether NVC assessment could be useful as an early, non-invasive, surrogate marker for CSVD.

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