Abstract

Current protocols examining cerebral autoregulation (CA) parameters require participants to refrain from exercise for 12–24 hr, however there is sparse objective evidence examining the recovery trajectory of these measures following exercise across the cardiac cycle (diastole, mean, and systole). Therefore, this study sought to determine the duration acute exercise impacts CA and the within‐day reproducibility of these measures. Nine participants performed squat–stand maneuvers at 0.05 and 0.10 Hz at baseline before three interventions: 45‐min moderate‐continuous exercise (at 50% heart‐rate reserve), 30‐min high‐intensity intervals (ten, 1‐min at 85% heart‐rate reserve), and a control day (30‐min quiet rest). Squat–stands were repeated at hours zero, one, two, four, six, and eight after each condition. Transcranial doppler ultrasound of the middle cerebral artery (MCA) and the posterior cerebral artery (PCA) was used to characterize CA parameters across the cardiac cycle. At baseline, the systolic CA parameters were different than mean and diastolic components (ps < 0.015), however following both exercise protocols in both frequencies this disappeared until hour four within the MCA (ps > 0.079). In the PCA, phase values were affected only following high‐intensity intervals until hour four (ps > 0.055). Normalized gain in all cardiac cycle domains remained different following both exercise protocols (ps < 0.005) and across the control day (p < .050). All systolic differences returned by hour six across all measures (ps < 0.034). Future CA studies may use squat–stand maneuvers to assess the cerebral pressure–flow relationship 6 hr after exercise. Finally, CA measures under this paradigm appear to have negligible within‐day variation, allowing for reproducible interpretations to be drawn.

Highlights

  • The brain is the most highly perfused organ in the body

  • Participants sat quietly for 30 min during the control condition. These exercise intensities were selected as moderate intensity continuous exercise (MICT) represents roughly 60% VO2max, which should be consistent with the peak increase in Cerebral blood flow velocity (CBV) (Marsden et al, 2012; Ogoh, Dalsgaard, et al, 2005), whereas the high intensity interval training (HIIT) protocol produces efforts in the 80%–90% range of VO2max, which may lead to reductions in CBV due to hypocapnia-induced cerebral vasoconstriction secondary to hyperventilation (Marsden et al, 2012; Ogoh & Ainslie, 2009; Ogoh, Dalsgaard, et al, 2005)

  • Each phase of the cardiac cycle responded differently to exercise, with the systolic component showing impairments for up to 4 hr, compared to diastolic and mean which recovered after 2 hr in all measures

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Summary

Introduction

The brain is the most highly perfused organ in the body. it comprises only 1.5%–2% of total body mass, it consumes roughly 10%–15% of resting cardiac output and 15%–20% of total oxygen consumption at rest (Williams & Leggett, 1989). The brain is able to regulate its blood supply somewhat independently of the rest of the body through a process known as cerebral autoregulation (CA) (Lassen, 1959; Paulson, Strandgaard, & Edvinsson, 1990; Willie et al, 2014) This has been previously quantified in two domains, which are thought to be on a spectrum: static (Lassen, 1959) and dynamic (Aaslid, Lindegaard, Sorteberg, & Nornes, 1989). This methodological approach leads to greater reproducibility within the CA outcome measures (phase, absolute gain, and normalized gain) (Claassen et al, 2009; Smirl et al, 2015), which will enhance the interpretability and application of the findings related to the current investigation

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