Spontaneous fluctuations in cerebral blood flow regulation: contribution of PaCO2

Author:

Panerai R. B.12,Dineen N. E.3,Brodie F. G.3,Robinson T. G.32

Affiliation:

1. Medical Physics Group and

2. Leicester National Institute of Health Research Biomedical Research Unit in Cardiovascular Science, Glenfield Hospital, Leicester, United Kingdom

3. Ageing and Stroke Medicine Group, Department of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Leicester National Health Service Trust, Leicester; and

Abstract

To investigate the temporal variability of dynamic cerebral autoregulation (CA), the transient response of cerebral blood flow to rapid changes in arterial blood pressure, a new approach was introduced to improve the temporal resolution of dynamic CA assessment. Continuous bilateral recordings of cerebral blood flow velocity (transcranial Doppler, middle cerebral artery), end-tidal Pco2 (PetCO2, infrared capnograph), and blood pressure (Finapres) were obtained at rest and during breath hold in 30 young subjects (25 ± 6 yr old) and 30 older subjects (64 ± 4 yr old). Time-varying estimates of the autoregulation index [ARI( t)] were obtained with an autoregressive-moving average model with coefficients expanded by orthogonal decomposition. The temporal pattern of ARI( t) varied inversely with PetCO2, decreasing with hypercapnia. At rest, ARI( t) showed spontaneous fluctuations that were significantly different from noise and significantly correlated with spontaneous fluctuations in PetCO2 in the majority of recordings (young: 72% and old: 65%). No significant differences were found in ARI( t) due to aging. This new approach to improve the temporal resolution of dynamic CA parameters allows the identification of physiologically meaningful fluctuations in dynamic CA efficiency at rest and in response to changes in arterial CO2.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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