Abstract
Hypercapnia during breath holding is believed to be the dominant driver behind the modulation of cerebral blood flow (CBF). However, increasing evidence show that mild hypoxia and mild hypercapnia in breath hold (BH) could work synergistically to enhance CBF response. We hypothesized that breath-by-breath O2-CO2 exchange ratio (bER), defined as the ratio of the change in partial pressure of oxygen (ΔPO2) to that of carbon dioxide (ΔPCO2) between end inspiration and end expiration, would be able to better correlate with the global and regional cerebral hemodynamic responses (CHR) to BH challenge. We aimed to investigate whether bER is a more useful index than end-tidal PCO2 to characterize cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) under BH challenge. We used transcranial Doppler ultrasound (TCD) to evaluate CHR under BH challenge by measuring cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFv) in the middle cerebral arteries. Regional changes in CHR to BH and exogenous CO2 challenges were mapped with blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) signal changes using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). We correlated respiratory gas exchange (RGE) metrics (bER, ΔPO2, ΔPCO2, end-tidal PCO2 and PO2, and time of breaths) with CHR (CBFv and BOLD) to BH challenge. Temporal features and frequency characteristics of RGE metrics and their coherence with CHR were examined. CHR to brief BH epochs and free breathing were coupled with both ΔPO2 and ΔPCO2. We found that bER was superior to either ΔPO2 or ΔPCO2 alone in coupling with the changes of CBFv and BOLD signals under breath hold challenge. The regional CVR results derived by regressing BOLD signal changes on bER under BH challenge resembled those derived by regressing BOLD signal changes on end-tidal PCO2 under exogenous CO2 challenge. Our findings provide a novel insight on the potential of using bER to better quantify CVR changes under BH challenge.
Highlights
Breath hold challenge has been used in the clinical setting as a simple vasoactive stimulus for the assessment of cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) [1, 2] in patients with carotid artery diseases [3,4,5] as well as brain tumors [6]
Our findings provide a novel insight on the potential of using breath O2-CO2 exchange ratio (bER) to better quantify CVR changes under breath hold (BH) challenge
To address the question of redundancy among respiratory gas exchange (RGE) metrics, we examined the correlations among bER, ΔPCO2, ΔPO2, PETCO2, PETO2 and time of breaths (ToB) in both transcranial Doppler sonography (TCD) and MRI sessions
Summary
Breath hold challenge has been used in the clinical setting as a simple vasoactive stimulus for the assessment of cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) [1, 2] in patients with carotid artery diseases [3,4,5] as well as brain tumors [6]. The time of breaths (ToB) had often been taken as an indicator of the strength of the vasoactive stimulus to induce changes of cerebral blood flow (CBF). TCD offers high temporal resolution to evaluate cerebrovascular responses without the concern of aliasing high frequency hemodynamic signal into the low frequency range, it does not provide regional information. Regional CVR mapping with blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signal changes measured by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used. We aimed to investigate whether bER is a more useful index than end-tidal PCO2 to characterize cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) under BH challenge
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