Affiliation:
1. Department of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Leicester, Leicester, United Kingdom
Abstract
Background:
Dynamic cerebral autoregulation (dCA) remains intact in both ageing and
dementia, but studies of neurovascular coupling (NVC) have produced mixed findings.
Objective:
We investigated the effects of task-activation on dCA in healthy older adults (HOA),
and patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer’s Disease (AD).
Methods:
Resting and task-activated data from thirty HOA, twenty-two MCI, and thirty-four AD
were extracted from a database. The autoregulation index (ARI) was determined at rest and during
five cognitive tasks from transfer function analysis. NVC responses were present where group-specific
thresholds of cross-correlation peak function and variance ratio were exceeded. Cumulative response
rate (CRR) was the total number of positive responses across five tasks and two hemispheres.
Results:
ARI differed between groups in dominant (p=0.012) and non-dominant (p=0.042) hemispheres
at rest but not during task-activation (p=0.33). ARI decreased during language and memory
tasks in HOA (p=0.002) but not in MCI or AD (p=0.40). There was a significant positive correlation
between baseline ARI and CRR in all groups (r=0.26, p=0.018), but not within sub-groups.
Conclusion:
dCA efficiency was reduced in task-activation in healthy but not cognitively impaired
participants. These results indicate differences in neurovascular processing in healthy older adults
relative to cognitively impaired individuals.
Funder
Dunhill clinical research training fellow
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Neurology (clinical),Neurology
Cited by
7 articles.
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