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Title: Steady-state cerebral blood flow regulation at altitude: interaction between oxygen and carbon dioxide. Author: Lafave HC, Zouboules SM, James MA, Purdy GM, Rees JL, Steinback CD, Ondrus P, Brutsaert TD, Nysten HE, Nysten CE, Hoiland RL, Sherpa MT, Day TA. Journal: Eur J Appl Physiol; 2019 Dec; 119(11-12):2529-2544. PubMed ID: 31559499. Abstract: 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.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]