The association between carotid blood flow and resting-state brain activity in patients with cerebrovascular diseases

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作者
Takahiro Matsumoto
Hideyuki Hoshi
Yoko Hirata
Sayuri Ichikawa
Keisuke Fukasawa
Tomoyuki Gonda
Jesús Poza
Víctor Rodríguez-González
Carlos Gómez
Yoshihito Shigihara
机构
[1] Kumagaya General Hospital,Department of Neurosurgery
[2] Hokuto Hospital,Precision Medicine Centre
[3] Kumagaya General Hospital,Clinical Laboratory
[4] Kumagaya General Hospital,Department of Rehabilitation
[5] University of Valladolid,Biomedical Engineering Group, Higher Technical School of Telecommunications Engineering
[6] Biomateriales y Nanomedicina,Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red en Bioingeniería, (CIBER
[7] University of Valladolid,BBN)
[8] Kumagaya General Hospital,Instituto de Investigación en Matemáticas (IMUVA)
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摘要
Cerebral hypoperfusion impairs brain activity and leads to cognitive impairment. Left and right common carotid arteries (CCA) are the major source of cerebral blood supply. It remains unclear whether blood flow in both CCA contributes equally to brain activity. Here, CCA blood flow was evaluated using ultrasonography in 23 patients with cerebrovascular diseases. Resting-state brain activity and cognitive status were also assessed using magnetoencephalography and a cognitive subscale of the Functional Independence Measure, respectively, to explore the relationships between blood flow, functional brain activity, and cognitive status. Our findings indicated that there was an association between blood flow and resting-state brain activity, and between resting-state brain activity and cognitive status. However, blood flow was not significantly associated with cognitive status directly. Furthermore, blood velocity in the right CCA correlated with resting-state brain activity, but not with the resistance index. In contrast, the resistance index in the left CCA correlated with resting-state brain activity, but not with blood velocity. Our findings suggest that hypoperfusion is important in the right CCA, whereas cerebral microcirculation is important in the left CCA for brain activity. Hence, this asymmetry should be considered when designing appropriate therapeutic strategies.
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