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Challenging neurovascular coupling through complex and variable duration cognitive paradigms: A subcomponent analysis

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posted on 2023-12-05, 14:53 authored by K Ladthavorlaphatt, FBS Surti, LC Beishon, RB Panerai, TG Robinson
A similar pattern of cerebral blood velocity (CBv) response has been observed for neurovascular coupling (NVC) assessment with cognitive tasks of varying complexity and duration. This lack of specificity could result from parallel changes in arterial blood pressure (BP) and PaCO2, which could confound the estimates of NVC integrity. Healthy participants (n = 16) underwent recordings at rest (5 min sitting) and during randomized paradigms of different complexity (naming words (NW) beginning with P-, R-, V- words and serial subtractions (SS) of 100–2, 100–7, 1000–17, with durations of 5, 30 and 60 s). Bilateral CBv (middle cerebral arteries, transcranial Doppler), end-tidal CO2 (EtCO2, capnography), blood pressure (BP, Finapres) and heart rate (HR, ECG) were recorded continuously. The bilateral CBv response to all paradigms was classified under objective criteria to select only responders, then the repeated data were averaged between visits. Bilateral CBv change to tasks was decomposed into the relative contributions (subcomponents) of arterial BP (VBP; neurogenic), critical closing pressure (VCrCP; metabolic) and resistance area product (VRAP; myogenic). A temporal effect was demonstrated in bilateral VBP and VRAP during all tasks (p<0.002), increased VBP early (between 0 and 10 s) and followed by decreases of VRAP late (25–35 s) in the response. VCrCP varied by complexity and duration (p<0.046). The main contributions to CBv responses to cognitive tasks of different complexity and duration were VBP and VRAP, whilst a smaller contribution from VCrCP would suggest sensitivity to metabolic demands. Further studies are needed to assess the influence of different paradigms, ageing and cerebrovascular conditions.

Funding

ST G5420

The cognition and flow study: The effects of brain training on brain blood flow

Dunhill Medical Trust

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Citation

Kannaphob Ladthavorlaphatt, Farhaana B.S. Surti, Lucy C. Beishon, Ronney B. Panerai, Thompson G. Robinson, Challenging neurovascular coupling through complex and variable duration cognitive paradigms: A subcomponent analysis, Medical Engineering & Physics, Volume 110, 2022, 103921, ISSN 1350-4533, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.medengphy.2022.103921.

Author affiliation

Department of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Medical Engineering and Physics

Volume

110

Pagination

103921 - 103921

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

1350-4533

eissn

1873-4030

Acceptance date

2022-11-09

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2023-12-05

Language

en

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