Diagnostic and prognostic performance of Mxa and transfer function analysis-based dynamic cerebral autoregulation metrics

Author:

Olsen Markus Harboe1ORCID,Riberholt Christian12,Plovsing Ronni R34,Berg Ronan MG5678,Møller Kirsten14

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neuroanaesthesiology, Neuroscience Centre, Copenhagen University Hospital – Rigshospitalet, Denmark

2. Department of Neurorehabilitation/Traumatic Brain Injury, Copenhagen University Hospital – Rigshospitalet, Denmark

3. Department of Anaesthesia, Hvidovre Hospital, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark

4. Institute of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark

5. Department of Clinical Physiology, Nuclear Medicine & PET, Copenhagen University Hospital – Rigshospitalet, Denmark

6. Centre for Physical Activity Research, Copenhagen University Hospital – Rigshospitalet, Denmark

7. Department of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark

8. Neurovascular Research Laboratory, Faculty of Life Sciences and Education, University of South Wales, Pontypridd, UK

Abstract

Dynamic cerebral autoregulation is often assessed by continuously recorded arterial blood pressure (ABP) and transcranial Doppler-derived mean cerebral blood flow velocity followed by analysis in the time and frequency domain, respectively. Sequential correlation (in the time domain, yielding e.g., the measure mean flow index, Mxa) and transfer function analysis (TFA) (in the frequency domain, yielding, e.g., normalised and non-normalised gain as well as phase in the low frequency domain) are commonly used approaches. This study investigated the diagnostic and prognostic performance of these metrics. We included recordings from 48 healthy volunteers, 19 patients with sepsis, 36 with traumatic brain injury (TBI), and 14 patients admitted to a neurorehabilitation unit. The diagnostic (between healthy volunteers and patients) and prognostic performance (to predict death or poor functional outcome) of Mxa and the TFA measures were assessed by area under the receiver-operating characteristic (AUROC) curves. AUROC curves generally indicated that the measures were ‘no better than chance’ (AUROC ∼0.5) both for distinguishing between healthy volunteers and patient groups, and for predicting outcomes in our cohort. No metric emerged as superior for distinguishing between healthy volunteers and different patient groups, for assessing the effect of interventions, or for predicting mortality or functional outcome.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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