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Impact of aerobic fitness on cerebral blood flow and cerebral vascular responsiveness to CO2 in young and older men.

I D BrazD FlückG Y H LipC LundbyJames P Fisher
Published in: Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports (2016)
We sought to test the hypothesis that brain blood flow and cerebral vascular responsiveness to carbon dioxide (CVRCO2 ) are greater in aerobically trained young and old individuals compared to their untrained counterparts. In 11 young trained {[23 (20-26) years] [mean (95% confidence interval)]}, 10 young untrained [25 (22-28) years], 8 older trained [65 (61-69) years], and 9 older untrained [67 (64-71) years] healthy individuals, Doppler ultrasound of the internal carotid (ICA) and vertebral (VA) artery blood flow were determined, along with middle cerebral artery mean flow velocity (MCA Vmean ). Bilateral ICA blood flow was higher in trained individuals when compared to untrained (≈31%, P < 0.05), but was not influenced by age. VA blood flow was not affected by age or cardiorespiratory fitness. MCA Vmean was reduced with age [59.5 (55.0-64.1) cm/s young vs 43.6 (38.4-48.9) cm/s old, P < 0.05] with no significant effect of training observed. MCA CVRCO2 were not significantly affected by either age or training status, while ICA CVRCO2 tended to be elevated in the old trained group. These findings indicate that endurance training enhances bilateral ICA but not VA blood flow in both young and older individuals.
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