| Literature DB >> 26858243 |
Eugenio Gutiérrez-Jiménez1, Changsi Cai2, Irene Klærke Mikkelsen2, Peter Mondrup Rasmussen2, Hugo Angleys2, Mads Merrild2, Kim Mouridsen2, Sune Nørhøj Jespersen2,3, Jonghwan Lee4, Nina Kerting Iversen2, Sava Sakadzic4, Leif Østergaard2,5.
Abstract
Functional hyperemia reduces oxygen extraction efficacy unless counteracted by a reduction of capillary transit-time heterogeneity of blood. We adapted a bolus tracking approach to capillary transit-time heterogeneity estimation for two-photon microscopy and then quantified changes in plasma mean transit time and capillary transit-time heterogeneity during forepaw stimulation in anesthetized mice (C57BL/6NTac). In addition, we analyzed transit time coefficient of variance = capillary transit-time heterogeneity/mean transit time, which we expect to remain constant in passive, compliant microvascular networks. Electrical forepaw stimulation reduced, both mean transit time (11.3% ± 1.3%) and capillary transit-time heterogeneity (24.1% ± 3.3%), consistent with earlier literature and model predictions. We observed a coefficient of variance reduction (14.3% ± 3.5%) during functional activation, especially for the arteriolar-to-venular passage. Such coefficient of variance reduction during functional activation suggests homogenization of capillary flows beyond that expected as a passive response to increased blood flow by other stimuli. This finding is consistent with an active neurocapillary coupling mechanism, for example via pericyte dilation. Mean transit time and capillary transit-time heterogeneity reductions were consistent with the relative change inferred from capillary hemodynamics (cell velocity and flux). Our findings support the important role of capillary transit-time heterogeneity in flow-metabolism coupling during functional activation.Entities:
Keywords: Capillary transit-time heterogeneity; neurovascular coupling; perfusion; transit time; two-photon microscopy
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26858243 PMCID: PMC5363666 DOI: 10.1177/0271678X16631560
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cereb Blood Flow Metab ISSN: 0271-678X Impact factor: 6.200