Hemodynamic and metabolic changes during hypercapnia with normoxia and hyperoxia using pCASL and TRUST MRI in healthy adults

Author:

Deckers Pieter T1ORCID,Bhogal Alex A2ORCID,Dijsselhof Mathijs BJ23ORCID,Faraco Carlos C4,Liu Peiying5,Lu Hanzhang5,Donahue Manus J4,Siero Jeroen C.W26ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands

2. Department of Radiology, Center for Image Sciences, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands

3. Department of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, Amsterdam Neuroscience, Amsterdam UMC (location VUmc), Amsterdam, Netherlands

4. Radiology and Radiological Sciences, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA

5. Department of Radiology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA

6. Spinoza Centre for Neuroimaging, Amsterdam, Netherlands

Abstract

Blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) or arterial spin labeling (ASL) MRI with hypercapnic stimuli allow for measuring cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR). Hypercapnic stimuli are also employed in calibrated BOLD functional MRI for quantifying neuronally-evoked changes in cerebral oxygen metabolism (CMRO2). It is often assumed that hypercapnic stimuli (with or without hyperoxia) are iso-metabolic; increasing arterial CO2 or O2 does not affect CMRO2. We evaluated the null hypothesis that two common hypercapnic stimuli, ‘CO2 in air’ and carbogen, are iso-metabolic. TRUST and ASL MRI were used to measure the cerebral venous oxygenation and cerebral blood flow (CBF), from which the oxygen extraction fraction (OEF) and CMRO2 were calculated for room-air, ‘CO2 in air’ and carbogen. As expected, CBF significantly increased (9.9% ± 9.3% and 12.1% ± 8.8% for ‘CO2 in air’ and carbogen, respectively). CMRO2 decreased for ‘CO2 in air’ (−13.4% ± 13.0%, p < 0.01) compared to room-air, while the CMRO2 during carbogen did not significantly change. Our findings indicate that ‘CO2 in air’ is not iso-metabolic, while carbogen appears to elicit a mixed effect; the CMRO2 reduction during hypercapnia is mitigated when including hyperoxia. These findings can be important for interpreting measurements using hypercapnic or hypercapnic-hyperoxic (carbogen) stimuli.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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