4.5 Article

Effects of cerebral ischemia on human neurovascular coupling, CO2 reactivity, and dynamic cerebral autoregulation

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 118, Issue 2, Pages 170-177

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00620.2014

Keywords

acute ischemic stroke; cerebral hemodynamics; cerebral blood flow velocity; cerebrovascular reactivity; neurovascular coupling; transcranial Doppler ultrasound

Funding

  1. Brazilian Ministry of Education [0411-10-8]
  2. EPSRC [EP/K041207/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Cerebral blood flow (CBF) regulation can be impaired in acute ischemic stroke but the combined effects of dynamic cerebral autoregulation (CA), CO2 cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR), and neurovascular coupling (NVC), obtained from simultaneous measurements, have not been described. CBF velocity in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) (CBFv, transcranial Doppler), blood pressure (BP, Finometer), and end-tidal P-CO2 (PETCO2, infrared capnography) were recorded during a 1-min passive movement of the arm in 27 healthy controls [mean age (SD) 61.4 (6.0) yr] and 27 acute stroke patients [age 63 (11.7) yr]. A multivariate autoregressive-moving average model was used to separate the contributions of BP, arterial PCO2 (Pa-CO2), and the neural activation to the CBFv responses. CBFv step responses for the BP, CO2, and stimulus inputs were also obtained. The contribution of the stimulus to the CBFv response was highly significant for the difference between the affected side [area under the curve (AUC) 104.5 (4.5)%] and controls [AUC 106.9 (4.3)%; P = 0.008]. CBFv step responses to CO2 [affected hemisphere 0.39 (0.7), unaffected 0.55 (0.8), controls 1.39 (0.9)%/mmHg; P = 0.01, affected vs. controls; P = 0.025, unaffected vs. controls] and motor stimulus inputs [affected hemisphere 0.20 (0.1), unaffected 0.22 (0.2), controls 0.37 (0.2) arbitrary units; P = 0.009, affected vs. controls; P = 0.02, unaffected vs. controls] were reduced in the stroke group compared with controls. The CBFv step responses to the BP input at baseline and during the paradigm were not different between groups (P = 0.07), but PETCO2 was lower in the stroke group (P < 0.05). These results provide new insights into the interaction of CA, CVR, and NVC in both health and disease states.

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