Abstract

Transcranial Doppler ultrasound (TCD) allows measurement of blood flow velocities in the intracranial vessels, and can be used to assess cerebral vasodilator responses to a hypercapnic stimulus. The reliability of this technique has not been established, nor is there agreement about whether the technique should be performed in sitting or lying postures. We tested the intra- and inter-rater reliability of measures of cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) in 10 healthy adults, in sitting and lying postures. Participants underwent triplicate bilateral ultrasound assessment of flow velocities in the middle cerebral arteries whilst sitting and lying supine prior to and during inhalation of Carbogen (5% CO2, 95% O2) for 2 min. This procedure was performed twice by each of two raters for a total of four sessions. CVR was calculated as the difference between baseline and the peak blood flow velocity attained during CO2 inhalation. Intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) for intra-rater reliability were greater sitting than lying for both raters (e.g. Rater 1 ICC sitting = 0.822, lying = 0.734), and inter-rater reliability was also greater in sitting (e.g. sitting ICC = 0.504, lying = 0.081). These results suggest that assessment of CVR using TCD should be performed with participants sitting in order to maximise CVR measurement reliability.

Highlights

  • Transcranial Doppler (TCD) sonography allows real time measurement of blood flow velocity in intracranial arteries with high temporal resolution and has been used for over two decades to assess cerebral haemodynamics in healthy adults and in disease states

  • There were no differences between hemispheres when data from both testing sessions for both raters were combined, allowing this data to be combined for further analysis

  • Assessment of cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) in healthy adults can be achieved with bilateral recording of cerebral blood flow velocity (CBV) in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) with acceptable reproducibility and inter-rater reliability

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Summary

Introduction

Transcranial Doppler (TCD) sonography allows real time measurement of blood flow velocity in intracranial arteries with high temporal resolution and has been used for over two decades to assess cerebral haemodynamics in healthy adults and in disease states. TCD can be utilised to assess cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR), i.e. the vasodilation of cerebral arterioles in response to a physiological stimulus such as an increase in the partial pressure of arterial CO2 (hypercapnia) (Ainslie & Duffin, 2009; Willie et al, 2011). Several reports suggest that the cerebral vasodilator response to hypercapnia depends on. How to cite this article McDonnell et al (2013), Transcranial Doppler ultrasound to assess cerebrovascular reactivity: reliability, reproducibility and effect of posture. The reliability of the CVR method, under differing postural conditions (i.e. lying vs sitting) has not been fully investigated

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