Real-Time Cerebral Hemodynamic Response to Tactile Somatosensory Stimulation.

J Neuroimaging

Departments of Biological Systems Engineering, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE.

Published: November 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent studies on rodents indicate that somatosensory stimulation may protect against ischemic stroke by enhancing the blood flow relationship in the brain's vascular system.
  • This study examined how rapidly cerebral blood flow velocity changes in the middle cerebral arteries occur during this type of stimulation using advanced imaging techniques.
  • The results showed significant increases in blood flow during the stimulation, along with a notable adaptation in response over multiple trials, indicating the effectiveness of this method for studying hemodynamic changes in the brain.

Article Abstract

Background And Purpose: Recent studies in rodents suggest that somatosensory stimulation could provide neuroprotection during ischemic stroke by inducing plasticity in the cortex-vasculature relationship. While functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has shown that somatosensory stimulation increases cerebral blood flow (CBF) over several seconds, subsecond changes in CBF in the basal cerebral arteries have rarely been studied due to temporal resolution limitations. This study characterized hemodynamic changes in the middle cerebral arteries (MCAs) during somatosensory stimulation with high temporal resolution (100 samples/s) using functional transcranial Doppler ultrasound (fTCD).

Methods: Pneumotactile somatosensory stimulation, consisting of punctate pressure pulses traversing the glabrous skin of the hand at 25 cm/s, was used to induce CBF velocity (CBFV) response curves. Changes in CBFV were measured in the bilateral MCAs using fTCD. All 12 subjects underwent three consecutive trials consisting of 20 seconds of stimulation followed by 5 minutes of rest.

Results: Sharp, bilateral increases in CBFV of about 20% (left MCA = 20.5%, right MCA = 18.8%) and sharp decreases in pulsatility index of about 8% were observed during stimulation. Left lateralization of up to 3.9% was also observed. The magnitude of the initial increase in CBFV showed significant adaptation between subsequent trials.

Conclusions: Pneumotactile somatosensory stimulation is a potent stimulus that can evoke large, rapid hemodynamic changes, with adaptation between successive stimulus applications. Due to its high temporal resolution, fTCD is useful for identifying quickly evolving hemodynamic responses, and for correlating changes in hemodynamic parameters such as pulsatility index (PI) and CBFV.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6212317PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jon.12546DOI Listing

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