The effect of hypercapnia on regional cerebral blood flow regulation during progressive lower-body negative pressure.

Eur J Appl Physiol

Department of Biology, Faculty of Science and Technology, Mount Royal University, 4825 Mount Royal Gate SW, Calgary, AB, T3E 6K6, Canada.

Published: January 2021

Purpose: Previous work indicates that dynamic cerebral blood flow (CBF) regulation is impaired during hypercapnia; however, less is known about the impact of resting hypercapnia on regional CBF regulation during hypovolemia. Furthermore, there is disparity within the literature on whether differences between anterior and posterior CBF regulation exist during physiological stressors. We hypothesized: (a) lower-body negative pressure (LBNP)-induced reductions in cerebral blood velocity (surrogate for CBF) would be more pronounced during hypercapnia, indicating impaired CBF regulation; and (b) the anterior and posterior cerebral circulations will exhibit similar responses to LBNP.

Methods: In 12 healthy participants (6 females), heart rate (electrocardiogram), mean arterial pressure (MAP; finger photoplethosmography), partial pressure of end-tidal carbon dioxide (PCO), middle cerebral artery blood velocity (MCAv) and posterior cerebral artery blood velocity (PCAv; transcranial Doppler ultrasound) were measured. Cerebrovascular conductance (CVC) was calculated as MCAv or PCAv indexed to MAP. Two randomized incremental LBNP protocols were conducted (- 20, - 40, - 60 and - 80 mmHg; three-minute stages), during coached normocapnia (i.e., room air), and inspired 5% hypercapnia (~ + 7 mmHg PCO in normoxia).

Results: The main findings were: (a) static CBF regulation in the MCA and PCA was similar during normocapnic and hypercapnic LBNP trials, (b) MCA and PCA CBV and CVC responded similarly to LBNP during normocapnia, but (c) PCAv and PCA CVC were reduced to a greater extent at - 60 mmHg LBNP (P = 0.029; P < 0.001) during hypercapnia.

Conclusion: CBF regulation during hypovolemia was preserved in hypercapnia, and regional differences in cerebrovascular control may exist during superimposed hypovolemia and hypercapnia.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00421-020-04506-2DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cbf regulation
20
cerebral blood
12
blood velocity
12
hypercapnia regional
8
blood flow
8
lower-body negative
8
negative pressure
8
anterior posterior
8
posterior cerebral
8
cerebral artery
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!