Abstract
The time course of mean beat-to-beat changes in cerebral blood flow velocity changes induced by spontaneous transients in mean arterial blood pressure was studied in a group of 39 healthy subjects, ages 40 ± 15 (SD) years. Continuous 10-min noninvasive recordings of cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFV) from both middle cerebral arteries (MCA) with Doppler ultrasound (US) and simultaneous beat-to-beat arterial blood pressure (ABP) were made. A total of 522 spontaneous positive transients of ABP and CBFV were extracted with a maximum of 15 transients for each subject. The CBFV transient amplitude was normalized by the corresponding ABP change and the area-under-the-curve (AUC) of the falling phase was used to classify the CBFV regulatory response as either weak, moderate or strong. The coherent average of ABP and CBFV of each category confirmed the consistency of this classification, reinforced by the agreement of separate averages for recordings from the right and left MCA. All 39 subjects showed at least two categories of transients, with all three categories present in 33 subjects (right MCA) and 29 subjects (left MCA), respectively. These results indicate a significant short-term variability of CBFV responses in healthy subjects whose origin remains unexplained. (E-mail: rp9@le.ac.uk)
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