Regional disparity in continuously measured time-domain cerebrovascular reactivity indices: a scoping review of human literature

Author:

Sainbhi Amanjyot SinghORCID,Marquez Izabella,Gomez AlwynORCID,Stein Kevin Y,Amenta Fiorella,Vakitbilir Nuray,Froese Logan,Zeiler Frederick AORCID

Abstract

Abstract Objective: Cerebral blood vessels maintaining relatively constant cerebral blood flow (CBF) over wide range of systemic arterial blood pressure (ABP) is referred to as cerebral autoregulation (CA). Impairments in CA expose the brain to pressure-passive flow states leading to hypoperfusion and hyperperfusion. Cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) metrics refer to surrogate metrics of pressure-based CA that evaluate the relationship between slow vasogenic fluctuations in cerebral perfusion pressure/ABP and a surrogate for pulsatile CBF/cerebral blood volume. Approach: We performed a systematically conducted scoping review of all available human literature examining the association between continuous CVR between more than one brain region/channel using the same CVR index. Main Results: In all the included 22 articles, only handful of transcranial doppler (TCD) and near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) based metrics were calculated for only two brain regions/channels. These metrics found no difference between left and right sides in healthy volunteer, cardiac surgery, and intracranial hemorrhage patient studies. In contrast, significant differences were reported in endarterectomy, and subarachnoid hemorrhage studies, while varying results were found regarding regional disparity in stroke, traumatic brain injury, and multiple population studies. Significance: Further research is required to evaluate regional disparity using NIRS-based indices and to understand if NIRS-based indices provide better regional disparity information than TCD-based indices.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Manitoba Public Insurance (MPI) Professorship in Neuroscience

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Subject

Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering,Physiology,Biophysics

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