Steady-state cerebral blood flow regulation at altitude: interaction between oxygen and carbon dioxide

被引:0
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作者
Hailey C. Lafave
Shaelynn M. Zouboules
Marina A. James
Graeme M. Purdy
Jordan L. Rees
Craig D. Steinback
Peter Ondrus
Tom D. Brutsaert
Heidi E. Nysten
Cassandra E. Nysten
Ryan L. Hoiland
Mingma T. Sherpa
Trevor A. Day
机构
[1] Mount Royal University,Department of Biology, Faculty of Science and Technology
[2] University of Alberta,Faculty of Kinesiology, Sport, and Recreation
[3] University of Alberta,Department of Family Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry
[4] University of Syracuse,Centre for Heart, Lung, and Vascular Health
[5] Red Deer Regional Hospital,undefined
[6] University of British Columbia,undefined
[7] Kunde Hospital,undefined
[8] Khunde,undefined
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关键词
Cerebral blood flow; Cerebrovascular reactivity; High altitude; Hypoxia; Hypocapnia;
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摘要
High-altitude ascent imposes a unique cerebrovascular challenge due to two opposing blood gas chemostimuli. Specifically, hypoxia causes cerebral vasodilation, whereas respiratory-induced hypocapnia causes vasoconstriction. The conflicting nature of these two superimposed chemostimuli presents a challenge in quantifying cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) in chronic hypoxia. During incremental ascent to 4240 m over 7 days in the Nepal Himalaya, we aimed to (a) characterize the relationship between arterial blood gas stimuli and anterior, posterior and global (g)CBF, (b) develop a novel index to quantify cerebral blood flow (CBF) in relation to conflicting steady-state chemostimuli, and (c) assess these relationships with cerebral oxygenation (rSO2). On rest days during ascent, participants underwent supine resting measures at 1045 m (baseline), 3440 m (day 3) and 4240 m (day 7). These measures included pressure of arterial (Pa)CO2, PaO2, arterial O2 saturation (SaO2; arterial blood draws), unilateral anterior, posterior and gCBF (duplex ultrasound; internal carotid artery [ICA] and vertebral artery [VA], gCBF [{ICA + VA} × 2], respectively) and rSO2 (near-infrared spectroscopy). We developed a novel stimulus index (SI), taking into account both chemostimuli (PaCO2/SaO2). Subsequently, CBF was indexed against the SI to assess steady-state cerebrovascular responsiveness (SS-CVR). When both competing chemostimuli are taken into account, (a) SS-CVR was significantly higher in ICA, VA and gCBF at 4240 m compared to lower altitudes, (b) delta SS-CVR with ascent (1045 m vs. 4240 m) was higher in ICA vs. VA, suggesting regional differences in CBF regulation, and (c) ICA SS-CVR was strongly and positively correlated (r = 0.79) with rSO2 at 4240 m.
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页码:2529 / 2544
页数:15
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