Modeling the Mechanisms of Non-Neurogenic Dynamic Cerebral Autoregulation

IF 4.4 2区 医学 Q2 ENGINEERING, BIOMEDICAL IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering Pub Date : 2024-09-18 DOI:10.1109/TBME.2024.3463873
Natali van Zijl;Abhirup Banerjee;Stephen John Payne
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Abstract

Objective: Dynamic cerebral autoregulation (dCA) refers to a collection of mechanisms that act to maintain steady state cerebral blood flow (CBF) near constant despite changes in arterial blood pressure (ABP), but which is known to become impaired in various cerebrovascular diseases. Currently, the mechanisms of dCA and how they are affected in different physiological conditions are poorly understood. The objective of this study was to disentangle the magnitudes and time scales of the myogenic and metabolic responses of dCA, in order to investigate how each mechanism is affected in impaired dCA. Methods: A physiological model of dCA was developed, where both the myogenic and metabolic responses were represented by a gain and time constant. Model parameters were optimized with pressure-flow impulse responses under normocapnic, thigh cuff, and hypercapnic conditions. The impulse responses were derived by applying transfer function analysis (TFA) to experimental recordings of ABP (Finapres), end-tidal CO2 (capnograph), and CBF velocity (transcranial doppler ultrasound in bilateral middle cerebral arteries). Results: The myogenic gain to time constant ratio was significantly smaller (p-values < 0.001 using both univariate and multivariate TFA), and the metabolic time constant was significantly larger (p-values < 0.001 using both univariate and multivariate TFA) in hypercapnia compared to normocapnia. Conclusion: Both the myogenic and metabolic responses were shown to be affected in impaired dCA, and the metabolic response was shown to be slowed down. Significance: This study contributes to the understanding of the complexities of dCA and how it is affected in different physiological conditions.
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非神经源性动态脑自动调节机制建模
目的:动态脑自动调节(Dynamic cerebral autoregulation, dCA)是指在动脉血压(ABP)变化的情况下维持脑血流量(CBF)接近恒定的稳态,但在各种脑血管疾病中会受到损害的一系列机制。目前,dCA的作用机制及其在不同生理条件下的影响尚不清楚。本研究的目的是解开dCA的肌源性和代谢反应的大小和时间尺度,以研究dCA受损时每种机制是如何受到影响的。方法:建立dCA的生理模型,其中肌源性和代谢反应均由增益和时间常数表示。模型参数在正碳酸、大腿袖带和高碳酸条件下进行优化。通过传递函数分析(TFA)对实验记录的ABP (Finapres)、末潮CO2 (capnograph)和CBF速度(双侧大脑中动脉经颅多普勒超声)的脉冲响应进行推导。结果:与正常碳酸血症相比,高碳酸血症的肌原性增益与时间常数之比明显更小(单因素和多因素TFA的p值< 0.001),代谢时间常数明显更大(单因素和多因素TFA的p值< 0.001)。结论:dCA损伤后,肌源性和代谢反应均受到影响,代谢反应减慢。意义:本研究有助于了解dCA的复杂性及其在不同生理条件下的影响。
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来源期刊
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering 工程技术-工程:生物医学
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
4.30%
发文量
880
审稿时长
2.5 months
期刊介绍: IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering contains basic and applied papers dealing with biomedical engineering. Papers range from engineering development in methods and techniques with biomedical applications to experimental and clinical investigations with engineering contributions.
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Table of Contents Front Cover IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering Information for Authors IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering Handling Editors Information IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society Information
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