4.0 Article

Influence of CO2 on neurovascular coupling: interaction with dynamic cerebral autoregulation and cerebrovascular reactivity

Journal

PHYSIOLOGICAL REPORTS
Volume 2, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/phy2.280

Keywords

Carbon dioxide; cerebral hemodynamics; cerebrovascular reactivity; dynamic cerebral autoregulation; neurovascular coupling

Categories

Funding

  1. Brazilian Ministry of Education [0411-10-8]

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PaCO2 affects cerebral blood flow (CBF) and its regulatory mechanisms, but the interaction between neurovascular coupling (NVC), cerebral autoregulation (CA), and cerebrovascular reactivity to CO2 (CVR), in response to hypercapnia, is not known. Recordings of cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFv), blood pressure (BP), heart rate, and end-tidal CO2 (EtCO2) were performed in 18 subjects during normocapnia and 5% CO2 inhalation while performing a passive motor paradigm. Together with BP and EtCO2, a gate signal to represent the effect of stimulation was used as input to a multivariate autoregressive-moving average model to calculate their separate effects on CBFv. Hypercapnia led to a depression of dynamic CA at rest and during stimulation in both hemispheres (P < 0.02) as well as impairment of the NVC response, particularly in the ipsilateral hemisphere (P < 0.01). Neither hypercapnia nor the passive motor stimulation influenced CVR. Dynamic CA was not influenced by the motor paradigm during normocapnia. The CBFv step responses to each individual input (BP, EtCO2, stimulation) allowed identification of the influences of hypercapnia and neuromotor stimulation on CA, CVR, and NVC, which have not been previously described, and also confirmed the depressing effects of hypercapnia on CA and NVC. The stability of CVR during these maneuvers and the lack of influence of stimulation on dynamic CA are novel findings which deserve further investigation. Dynamic multivariate modeling can identify the complex interplay between different CBF regulatory mechanisms and should be recommended for studies involving similar interactions, such as the effects of exercise or posture on cerebral hemodynamics.

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