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COHmax: an algorithm to maximise coherence in estimates of dynamic cerebral autoregulation.

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posted on 2020-07-31, 13:11 authored by Ronney B Panerai, Kannakorn Intharakham, Jatinder Singh Minhas, Osian Llwyd, Angela SM Salinet, Emmanuel Katsogridakis, Paola Maggio, Thompson G Robinson
OBJECTIVE: The reliability of dynamic cerebral autoregulation (dCA) parameters, obtained with transfer function analysis (TFA) of spontaneous fluctuations in arterial blood pressure (BP), require statistically significant values of the coherence function. A new algorithm (COHmax) is proposed to increase values of coherence by means of the automated, selective removal of sub-segments of data. <div>APPROACH: Healthy subjects were studied at baseline (normocapnia) and during 5% breathing of CO2 (hypercapnia). BP (Finapres), cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFV, transcranial Doppler), end-tidal CO2 (EtCO2, capnography) and heart rate (ECG) were recorded continuously during 5 min in each condition. TFA was performed with sub-segments of data of duration (SEGD) 100, 50 or 25 s and the autoregulation index (ARI) was obtained from the CBFV response to a step change in BP. The area-under-the curve (AUC) was obtained from the receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curve for the detection of changes in dCA resulting from hypercapnia. </div><div>MAIN RESULTS: In 120 healthy subjects (69 male, age range 20-77 years), CO2 breathing was effective in changing mean EtCO2 and CBFV (p<0.001). For SEGD=100 s, ARI changed from 5.8 ± 1.4 (normocapnia) to 4.0 ± 1.7 (hypercapnia, p<0.0001), with similar differences for SEGD=50 or 25 s. Depending on the value of SEGD, in normocapnia, 15.8% to 18.3% of ARI estimates were rejected due to poor coherence, with corresponding rates of 8.3% to 13.3% in hypercapnia. With increasing coherence, 36.4% to 63.2% of these could be recovered in normocapnia (p<0.001) and 50.0% to 83.0% in hypercapnia (p<0.005). For SEGD=100 s, ROC AUC was not influenced by the algorithm, but it was superior to corresponding values for SEGD = 50 or 25 s. </div><div>SIGNIFICANCE: COHmax has the potential to improve the yield of TFA estimates of dCA parameters, without introducing a bias or deterioration of their ability to detect impairment of autoregulation. Further studies are needed to assess the behaviour of the algorithm in patients with different cerebrovascular conditions.</div>

History

Citation

Physiological Measurement, 2020, https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6579/aba67e

Author affiliation

Department of Cardiovascular Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Physiological Measurement

Publisher

IOP Publishing

issn

0967-3334

eissn

1361-6579

Acceptance date

2020-07-15

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2021-07-15

Spatial coverage

England

Language

eng

Publisher version

https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1361-6579/aba67e

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