Cerebrovascular blood oxygenation level dependent pulsatility at baseline and following acute exercise among healthy adolescents.
Athena E TheyersBenjamin I GoldsteinArron Ws MetcalfeAndrew D RobertsonBradley J MacIntoshPublished in: Journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism : official journal of the International Society of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism (2018)
Arterial stiffness is linked to cerebral small vessel damage and neurodegeneration, but barriers to accessing deep cerebrovascular anatomy limit our ability to assess the brain. This study describes an adaptation of a cardiac-related scrubbing method as a means of generating blood oxygenation level-dependent pulsatility maps based on the cardiac cycle. We examine BOLD pulsatility at rest, based on the non-parametric deviation from null metric, as well as changes following acute physiological stress from 20 min of moderate-intensity cycling in 45 healthy adolescents. We evaluate the influence of repetition time (TR) and echo time (TE) using simulated and multi-echo empirical data, respectively. There were tissue-specific and voxel-wise BOLD pulsatility decreases 20 min following exercise cessation. BOLD pulsatility detection was comparable over a range of TR and TE values when scan volumes were kept constant; however, short TRs (≤500 ms) and TEs (∼14 ms) acquisitions would yield the most efficient detection. Results suggest cardiac-related BOLD pulsatility may represent a robust and easily adopted method of mapping cerebrovascular pulsatility with voxel-wise resolution.
Keyphrases
- high intensity
- resting state
- physical activity
- liver failure
- functional connectivity
- young adults
- left ventricular
- mass spectrometry
- multiple sclerosis
- magnetic resonance
- ms ms
- drug induced
- computed tomography
- respiratory failure
- resistance training
- diffusion weighted
- magnetic resonance imaging
- intensive care unit
- machine learning
- brain injury
- big data
- electronic health record
- hepatitis b virus
- heart failure
- atrial fibrillation
- single molecule
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- cerebral ischemia
- artificial intelligence
- body composition
- blood brain barrier