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The middle cerebral artery blood velocity response to acute normobaric hypoxia occurs independently of changes in ventilation in humans.

Sultan E AlSalahiRehan T JunejoChris BradleyGeorge M BalanosChristoph SiebenmannJames P Fisher
Published in: Experimental physiology (2021)
Hypoxia induces ventilatory, cardiovascular and cerebrovascular adjustments to defend against reductions in systemic oxygen delivery. We aimed to determine whether the ventilatory response to moderate acute hypoxia increases cerebral perfusion independently of changes in arterial oxygenation. Eleven young healthy individuals were exposed to four 15 min experimental conditions: (1) normoxia (partial pressure of end-tidal oxygen, P ET O 2  = 100 mmHg), (2) hypoxia ( P ET O 2  = 50 mmHg), (3) normoxia with breathing volitionally matched to levels observed during hypoxia (hyperpnoea; P ET O 2  = 100 mmHg) and (4) hypoxia ( P ET O 2   = 50 mmHg) with respiratory frequency and tidal volume volitionally matched to levels observed during normoxia (i.e., restricted breathing (RB)). Isocapnia was maintained in all conditions. Middle cerebral artery mean blood velocity (MCA Vmean ), assessed by transcranial Doppler ultrasound, was increased during hypoxia (58 ± 12 cm/s, P = 0.04) and hypoxia + RB (61 ± 14 cm/s, P < 0.001) compared to normoxia (55 ± 11 cm/s), while it was unchanged during hyperpnoea (52 ± 13 cm/s, P = 0.08). MCA Vmean was not different between hypoxia and hypoxia + RB (P > 0.05). These findings suggest that the hypoxic ventilatory response does not increase cerebral perfusion, indexed using MCA Vmean , during moderate isocapnic acute hypoxia beyond that elicited by reduced oxygen saturation.
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