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Measuring cerebrovascular reactivity: what stimulus to use?

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TLDR
It is concluded that many of the stimuli in current use do not provide a standard stimulus comparable between individuals and in the same individual over time, and it is suggested that carbon dioxide is the most suitable vasoactive stimulus.
Abstract
Cerebrovascular reactivity is the change in cerebral blood flow in response to a vasodilatory or vasoconstrictive stimulus. Measuring variations of cerebrovascular reactivity between different regions of the brain has the potential to not only advance understanding of how the cerebral vasculature controls the distribution of blood flow but also to detect cerebrovascular pathophysiology. While there are standardized and repeatable methods for estimating the changes in cerebral blood flow in response to a vasoactive stimulus, the same cannot be said for the stimulus itself. Indeed, the wide variety of vasoactive challenges currently employed in these studies impedes comparisons between them. This review therefore critically examines the vasoactive stimuli in current use for their ability to provide a standard repeatable challenge and for the practicality of their implementation. Such challenges include induced reductions in systemic blood pressure, and the administration of vasoactive substances such as acetazolamide and carbon dioxide. We conclude that many of the stimuli in current use do not provide a standard stimulus comparable between individuals and in the same individual over time. We suggest that carbon dioxide is the most suitable vasoactive stimulus. We describe recently developed computer-controlled MRI compatible gas delivery systems which are capable of administering reliable and repeatable vasoactive CO2 stimuli.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Integrative regulation of human brain blood flow

TL;DR: Mechanisms regulating cerebral blood flow (CBF), with specific focus on humans, are reviewed and the following four key theses are corroborated: that cerebral autoregulation does not maintain constant perfusion through a mean arterial pressure range of 60–150 mmHg; that there is important stimulatory synergism and regulatory interdependence of arterial blood gases and blood pressure on CBF regulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR) MRI with CO2 challenge: A technical review.

TL;DR: The present review primarily focuses on methods that use CO2 inhalation as a physiological challenge while monitoring changes in hemodynamic MRI signals, as well as advances in MRI‐compatible gas delivery apparatus.
OtherDOI

Regulation of the Cerebral Circulation by Arterial Carbon Dioxide

TL;DR: An in-depth description of CBF regulation in response to alterations in PaCO2 is provided, with further consideration of how differences in reactivity of parallel networks can lead to the "steal" phenomenon.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cerebrovascular Reactivity Mapping: An Evolving Standard for Clinical Functional Imaging

TL;DR: The methodology of breath-hold cerebrovascular reactivity mapping is explained, both in terms of acquisition and analysis, and applications of this method to presurgical mapping, particularly with respect to blood oxygen level–dependent fMRI are reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A conceptual model for CO2-induced redistribution of cerebral blood flow with experimental confirmation using BOLD MRI

TL;DR: This model can be applied to provide a hemodynamic interpretation to BOLD signal changes in response to hypercapnia, and thereby aid in relating CVR maps to pathophysiological conditions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Glial and neuronal control of brain blood flow.

TL;DR: It is now recognized that neurotransmitter-mediated signalling has a key role in regulating cerebral blood flow, that much of this control is mediated by astrocytes, that oxygen modulates blood flow regulation, and that blood flow may be controlled by capillaries as well as by arterioles.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of altered arterial tensions of carbon dioxide and oxygen on cerebral blood flow and cerebral oxygen consumption of normal young men

TL;DR: Evidence bearing on the intrinsic control of the human cerebral circulation as revealed by quantitative measurements is derived.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cerebral autoregulation dynamics in humans.

TL;DR: There was a highly significant inverse relation between rate of regulation and PaCO2 (p less than 0.001), indicating that the response rate of cerebral autoregulation in awake normal humans is profoundly dependent on vascular tone.
Journal ArticleDOI

Glial regulation of the cerebral microvasculature

TL;DR: The involvement of astrocytes in neurov vascular coupling has broad implications for the interpretation of functional imaging signals and for the understanding of brain diseases that are associated with neurovascular dysfunction.
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