Abstract

The purpose of this study was to quantify differences in blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) activation on a working memory task, baseline cerebral blood flow (CBF0), and cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) between participants with and without a history of concussion. A dual-echo pseudo-continuous arterial spin labelling (pCASL) sequence was performed on a group of 10 subjects with a previous concussion (126 ± 15days prior) and on a control group (n = 10) during a visual working memory protocol. A separate dual-echo pCASL sequence was used to derive CVR and CBF0 measurements from a boxcar hypercapnic breathing protocol. Brain areas with significant activation differences on the working memory task between groups were identified and combined as an aggregate region of interest for CBF and CVR analyses. Areas of reduced BOLD activation during the working memory task in the concussed group included the ventral anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), the medial temporal gyrus (MTG), and the lateral occipital cortex in two loci. A single area of increased activation was located in the parietal operculum. Further analyses of CBF0 and CVR in these regions revealed reduced CVR in the concussed group in the MTG and ACC, while CBF0 did not differ. The differences in CVR between the two groups in these regions suggest that concussive injury may result in microvascular dysfunction. In turn, the decreased BOLD response during the task could be due to altered neurovascular coupling, rather than an impairment in neural activation alone. However, in other regions associated with working memory, unchanged CBF0 and CVR suggests that neural injury also persists after concussion. In the future, BOLD results should be normalized to CVR in order achieve a clearer understanding of the neural and vascular contributions to the differences in the signal.

Full Text
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