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Determining differences between critical closing pressure and resistance-area product: responses of the healthy young and old to hypocapnia.

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posted on 2019-06-18, 11:07 authored by Jatinder S. Minhas, Victoria J. Haunton, Thompson G. Robinson, Ronney B. Panerai
Healthy ageing has been associated with lower cerebral blood flow velocities (CBFVs); however, the behaviour of hemodynamic parameters associated with cerebrovascular tone (critical closing pressure, CrCP) and cerebrovascular resistance (resistance-area product, RAP) remains unclear. Specifically, evidence supports ageing being associated with greater cerebrovascular tone and resistance during exercise with elevated CrCP and RAP in older individuals at rest and during exercise. Comprehensive hemodynamic assessment of CrCP and RAP during hyperventilation-induced hypocapnia in two distinct age groups (young ≤ 49 and old > 50) has not been described. CBFV in the middle cerebral artery (CBFV, transcranial Doppler), blood pressure (BP, Finometer) and end-tidal CO2 (EtCO2, capnography) were recorded in 104 healthy individuals (43 young [age 33.8 (9.3) years], 61 old [age 64.1 (8.5) years]) during a minimum of 60 s of metronome-driven hyperventilation-induced hypocapnia. Autoregulation index was calculated as a function of time, using a moving window autoregressive-moving average model. CBFV was reduced in response to age (p < 0.0001) and hypocapnia (p = 0.023) (young 57.3 (14.4) vs. 44.9 cm s-1 (11.1), old 51.7 (12.9) vs. 37.8 cm s-1 (9.6)). Critical closing pressure (CrCP) increased significantly in response to hypocapnia (young 37.6 (18.5) vs. 39.7 mmHg (16.0), old 33.9 (13.5) vs. 39.3 mmHg (11.4); p < 0.0001). Resistance-area product was increased in response to age (p = 0.001) and hypocapnia (p = 0.004) (young 1.02 (0.40) vs. 1.09 mmHg cm s-1 (11.07), old 1.16 (0.34) vs. 1.34 mmHg cm s-1 (0.39)). RAP and not CrCP mediates differences in cerebrovascular resistance responses to hypocapnia between the healthy young and old individuals.

Funding

J.S.M. is Dunhill Medical Trust Clinical Research Training Fellow (RTF97/0117) at the Department of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Leicester. T.G.R., is an NIHR Senior Investigator.

History

Citation

Pflügers Archiv European Journal of Physiology, 2019

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/School of Medicine/Department of Cardiovascular Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Pflügers Archiv European Journal of Physiology

Publisher

Springer Verlag (Germany)

eissn

1432-2013

Acceptance date

2019-06-05

Copyright date

2019

Publisher version

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00424-019-02290-3

Notes

The file associated with this record is under embargo until 12 months after publication, in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy. The full text may be available through the publisher links provided above.

Language

en

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