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Does breathing pattern affect cerebrovascular reactivity?

Ece Su SayinAnahis DavidianHarrison LevineLashmi VenkatraghavanDavid J MikulisJoseph A FisherOlivia SobczykJames Duffin
Published in: Experimental physiology (2022)
Deviations of arterial carbon dioxide tension from resting values affect cerebral blood vessel tone and thereby cerebral blood flow. Arterial carbon dioxide tension also affects central respiratory chemoreceptors, adjusting respiratory drive. This coincidence raises the question: does respiratory drive also affect the cerebral blood flow response to carbon dioxide? A change in cerebral blood flow for a given change in the arterial carbon dioxide tension is defined as cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR). Two studies have reached conflicting conclusions on this question, using voluntary control of breathing as a disturbing factor during measurements of CVR. Here, we address some of the methodological limitations of both studies by using sequential gas delivery and targeted control of carbon dioxide and oxygen to enable a separation of the effects of carbon dioxide on CVR from breathing vigour. We confirm that there is no detectable superimposed effect of breathing efforts on CVR.
Keyphrases
  • carbon dioxide
  • cerebral blood flow
  • heart rate
  • brain injury
  • respiratory tract