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Increased blood pressure variability upon standing up improves reproducibility of cerebral autoregulation indices

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posted on 2018-01-25, 10:46 authored by Adam Mahdi, Dragana Nikolic, Anthony A. Birch, Mette S. Olufsen, Ronney B. Panerai, David M. Simpson, Stephen J. Payne
Dynamic cerebral autoregulation, that is the transient response of cerebral blood flow to changes in arterial blood pressure, is currently assessed using a variety of different time series methods and data collection protocols. In the continuing absence of a gold standard for the study of cerebral autoregulation it is unclear to what extent does the assessment depend on the choice of a computational method and protocol. We use continuous measurements of blood pressure and cerebral blood flow velocity in the middle cerebral artery from the cohorts of 18 normotensive subjects performing sit-to-stand manoeuvre. We estimate cerebral autoregulation using a wide variety of black-box approaches (including the following six autoregulation indices ARI, Mx, Sx, Dx, FIR and ARX) and compare them in the context of reproducibility and variability. For all autoregulation indices, considered here, the intra-class correlation was greater during the standing protocol, however, it was significantly greater (Fisher's Z-test) for Mx (p < 0.03), Sx (p < 0.003) and Dx (p < 0.03). In the specific case of the sit-to-stand manoeuvre, measurements taken immediately after standing up greatly improve the reproducibility of the autoregulation coefficients. This is generally coupled with an increase of the within-group spread of the estimates.

History

Citation

Medical Engineering and Physics, 2017, 47, pp. 151-158

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Medicine/Department of Cardiovascular Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Medical Engineering and Physics

Publisher

Elsevier

issn

1350-4533

eissn

1873-4030

Acceptance date

2017-06-01

Copyright date

2017

Available date

2018-09-01

Publisher version

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1350453317301443?via=ihub

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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