Literature DB >> 21500313

Depression of cortical activity in humans by mild hypercapnia.

Thomas Thesen1, Oleg Leontiev, Tao Song, Nima Dehghani, Donald J Hagler, Mingxiong Huang, Richard Buxton, Eric Halgren.   

Abstract

The effects of neural activity on cerebral hemodynamics underlie human brain imaging with functional magnetic resonance imaging and positron emission tomography. However, the threshold and characteristics of the converse effects, wherein the cerebral hemodynamic and metabolic milieu influence neural activity, remain unclear. We tested whether mild hypercapnia (5% CO2 ) decreases the magnetoencephalogram response to auditory pattern recognition and visual semantic tasks. Hypercapnia induced statistically significant decreases in event-related fields without affecting behavioral performance. Decreases were observed in early sensory components in both auditory and visual modalities as well as later cognitive components related to memory and language. Effects were distributed across cortical regions. Decreases were comparable in evoked versus spontaneous spectral power. Hypercapnia is commonly used with hemodynamic models to calibrate the blood oxygenation level-dependent response. Modifying model assumptions to incorporate the current findings produce a modest but measurable decrease in the estimated cerebral metabolic rate for oxygen change with activation. Because under normal conditions, low cerebral pH would arise when bloodflow is unable to keep pace with neuronal activity, the cortical depression observed here may reflect a homeostatic mechanism by which neuronal activity is adjusted to a level that can be sustained by available bloodflow. Animal studies suggest that these effects may be mediated by pH-modulating presynaptic adenosine receptors. Although the data is not clear, comparable changes in cortical pH to those induced here may occur during sleep apnea, sleep, and exercise. If so, these results suggest that such activities may in turn have generalized depressive effects on cortical activity.
Copyright © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21500313      PMCID: PMC3558280          DOI: 10.1002/hbm.21242

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp        ISSN: 1065-9471            Impact factor:   5.038


  56 in total

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Review 5.  The hemo-neural hypothesis: on the role of blood flow in information processing.

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  23 in total

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5.  Normal variations in brain oxygen extraction fraction are partly attributed to differences in end-tidal CO2.

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6.  Searching for a truly "iso-metabolic" gas challenge in physiological MRI.

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7.  Early and late stimulus-evoked cortical hemodynamic responses provide insight into the neurogenic nature of neurovascular coupling.

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8.  Hypercapnia is a key correlate of EEG activation and daytime sleepiness in hypercapnic sleep disordered breathing patients.

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