Abstract

BackgroundBreath – holding (BH) is a suitable method for inducing cerebral vasomotor reactivity (VMR). The assessment of VMR is of clinical importance for the early detection of risk conditions and for the follow-up of disabled patients. Transcranial Doppler ultrasonography (TCD) is used to measure cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFV) during BH, whereas near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) measures the concentrations of the oxygenated (O2Hb) and reduced (CO2Hb) hemoglobin. The two techniques provide circulatory and functional-related parameters. The aim of the study is the analysis of the relationship between oxygen supply and CBFV as detected by TCD and NIRS in healthy subjects performing BH.Methods20 healthy subjects (15 males and 5 females, age 33 ± 4.5 years) underwent TCD and NIRS examination during voluntary breath – holding. VMR was quantified by means of the breath-holding index (BHI). We evaluated the BHI based on mean CBFV, O2Hb and CO2Hb concentrations, relating the baseline to post-stimulus values. To quantify VMR we also computed the slope of the linear regression line of the concentration signals during BH. From the NIRS signals we also derived the bidimensional representation of VMR, plotting the instantaneous O2Hb concentration vs the CO2Hb concentration during the BH phase. Two subjects, a 30 years old current smoker female and a 63 years old male with a ischemic stroke event at the left middle cerebral artery, were tested as case studies.ResultsThe BHI for the CBFV was equal to 1.28 ± 0.71 %/s, the BHI for the O2Hb to 0.055 ± 0.037 μmol/l/s and the BHI for CO2Hb to 0.0006 ± 0.0019 μmol/l/s, the O2Hb slope was equal to 0.15 ± 0.09 μmol/l/s and the CO2Hb slope to 0.09 ± 0.04 μmol/l/s. There was a positive correlation between the CBFV and the O2Hb increments during BH (r = 0.865). The bidimensional VMR pattern shows common features among healthy subjects that are lost in the control studies.ConclusionWe show that healthy subjects present a common VMR pattern when counteracting cerebral blood flow perturbations induced by voluntary BH. The proposed methodology allows for the monitoring of changes in the VMR pattern, hence it could be used for assessing the efficacy of neurorehabilitation protocols.

Highlights

  • Breath – holding (BH) is a suitable method for inducing cerebral vasomotor reactivity (VMR)

  • Breath – holding is obviously subject dependent; while this poses the problem of dealing with different BH durations, we believe this technique is suitable for assessing VMR as response to a sudden and abrupt change in the oxygenation levels, which is a major risk condition for cerebral autoregulation

  • In this paper we proposed a methodology for the assessment of VMR during voluntary BH

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Summary

Introduction

Breath – holding (BH) is a suitable method for inducing cerebral vasomotor reactivity (VMR). Transcranial Doppler ultrasonography (TCD) is used to measure cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFV) during BH, whereas near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) measures the concentrations of the oxygenated (O2Hb) and reduced (CO2Hb) hemoglobin. The local amount of oxygen stored in the brain tissues is small compared to the metabolic needs, a specific mechanism is necessary in order to ensure the correct oxygenation levels. This mechanism has to provide oxygen during both resting condition and focal cortical activity. The limited spatial resolution of this technique allows for the quantification of CBFV only in the macro – vessels (essentially the arteries constituting the Willis circle plus the middle cerebral arteries), whereas a cortical localized modification of blood velocity is impossible to track. In about 25% of the patients, it is impossible to perform a TCD examination due to poor skull acoustic windows

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