Abstract

Stress blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) cardiovascular magnetic resonance allows for quantitative evaluation of blood flow reserve in skeletal muscles. This study aimed to prospectively compare three commonly used skeletal BOLD cardiovascular magnetic resonance paradigms in healthy adults: gas inhalation, cuff compression-induced ischemia and postocclusive reactive hyperemia, and exercise. Twelve young (22 ± 0.9 years) and 10 elderly (58 ± 5.0 years) healthy subjects underwent BOLD cardiovascular magnetic resonance under the three paradigms. signal intensity time curves were generated and quantitative parameters were calculated. Meanwhile, stress transcutaneous oxygen pressure measurements were obtained as comparison. Measurement reproducibility was assessed with intraclass correlation coefficients. Differences in the BOLD variation, the correlation with transcutaneous oxygen pressure, and the age-related change between paradigms were statistically analyzed. Minimum ischemic value and maximum hyperemic peak value showed the highest interobserver and interscan reproducibilities (intraclass correlation coefficient >0.90). The plantar dorsiflexion exercise paradigm elicited the largest BOLD variation (15.48% ± 10.56%), followed by ischemia (8.30% ± 6.33%). Negligible to weak changes were observed during gas inhalation. Correlations with transcutaneous oxygen pressure measurements were found in the ischemic phase (r = 0.966; P < .001) and in the postexercise phase (r = -0.936; P < .001). Minimum ischemic value, maximum hyperemic peak value, maximum postexercise value, and slope of postexercise signal decay showed significant differences between young and elderly subjects (P < .01). Ischemia and reactive hyperemia have superior reproducibility, and exercise could induce the largest variation. Key parameters from the two paradigms show age-related differences.

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