| Literature DB >> 29454381 |
Erin D Ozturk1,2, Can Ozan Tan3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The marked increase in the size of the brain, and consequently, in neural processing capability, throughout human evolution is the basis of the higher cognitive function in humans. However, greater neural, and thus information processing capability, comes at a significant metabolic cost; despite its relatively small size, the modern human brain consumes almost a quarter of the glucose and oxygen supply in the human body. Fortunately, several vascular mechanisms ensure sufficient delivery of glucose and oxygen to the active neural tissue (neurovascular coupling), prompt removal of neural metabolic by-products (cerebral vasoreactivity), and constant global blood supply despite daily variations in perfusion pressure (cerebral autoregulation). The aim of this review is to provide an integrated overview of the available data on these vascular mechanisms and their underlying physiology. We also briefly review modern experimental approaches to assess these mechanisms in humans, and further highlight the importance of these mechanisms for humans' evolutionary success by providing examples of their healthy adaptations as well as pathophysiological alterations.Entities:
Keywords: Autoregulation; Cerebral blood flow; Neurovascular coupling; Vasoreactivity
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29454381 PMCID: PMC5816507 DOI: 10.1186/s40101-018-0164-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Physiol Anthropol ISSN: 1880-6791 Impact factor: 2.867
Fig. 1Cerebrovascular responses and task performance (% correct) of one volunteer during baseline, a motor task, an attention task (0-back), and cognitive tasks of increasing difficulty (1-back to 3-back). Note that cerebral blood flow velocity increases in parallel to the increase in neural demand
Fig. 2Systemic arterial blood pressure and cerebral blood flow velocity responses to air rebreathing. Note the increase in cerebral blood flow velocity (third panel) in response to increasing end-tidal CO2 (first panel) without any apparent increase in arterial blood pressure. Bottom panel shows the change in cerebrovascular conductance (i.e., flow/pressure; to account for any change in pressure, which can alter cerebral blood flow independently) during two separate trials of air rebreathing by the same subject
Fig. 3The magnitude of fluctuations (i.e., spectral power) in end-tidal CO2 (as a surrogate for respiration; top panel), systemic arterial blood pressure (middle panel), and cerebral blood flow velocity (bottom panel) during spontaneous breathing, paced breathing (at 0.25 Hz; 15 bpm), and resistance breathing (~ 10–20 cmH2O resistance, lower panel). Note the marked increase in the magnitude of arterial pressure fluctuations below 0.1 Hz (i.e., slower than 10 s) during resistance breathing, due to increased slow fluctuations in respiration, and thus in intrathoracic pressure. Also note the lack of an increase in cerebral blood flow fluctuations in the same frequency band, indicative of effective cerebral autoregulation