| Literature DB >> 29969498 |
Andreas Finkelmeyer1, Jiabao He2,3, Laura Maclachlan4, Andrew M Blamire2, Julia L Newton4.
Abstract
Symptoms of orthostatic intolerance (OI) are common in Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) and similar disorders. These symptoms may relate to individual differences in intracranial compliance and cerebral blood perfusion. The present study used phase-contrast, quantitative flow magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to determine intracranial compliance based on arterial inflow, venous outflow and cerebrospinal fluid flow along the spinal canal into and out of the cranial cavity. Flow-sensitive Alternating Inversion Recovery (FAIR) Arterial Spin Labelling was used to measure cerebral blood perfusion at rest. Forty patients with CFS and 10 age and gender matched controls were scanned. Severity of symptoms of OI was determined from self-report using the Autonomic Symptom Profile. CFS patients reported significantly higher levels of OI (p < .001). Within the patient group, higher severity of OI symptoms were associated with lower intracranial compliance (r = -.346, p = .033) and higher resting perfusion (r = .337, p = .038). In both groups intracranial compliance was negatively correlated with cerebral perfusion. There were no significant differences between the groups in intracranial compliance or perfusion. In patients with CFS, low intracranial compliance and high resting cerebral perfusion appear to be associated with an increased severity of symptoms of OI. This may signify alterations in the ability of the cerebral vasculature to cope with changes to systemic blood pressure due to orthostatic stress, but this may not be specific to CFS.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29969498 PMCID: PMC6029803 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0200068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Participant characteristics.
| CFS group | HV group | group difference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 45.3 (11.6) | 49.4 (15.3) | t = 0.941, p = .35 | |
| 30/10 | 7/3 | χ2 = 0.104, p = .75 | |
| 26.0 (5.1) | 26.7 (4.6) | t = 0.428, p = .67 | |
| walk unaided | 82.5% (33) | 100% (10) | |
| walk with help | 17.5% (7) | 0% (0) | |
| not mobile | 0% (0) | 0% (0) | |
| Low | 57.5% (23) | 20% (2) | |
| Moderate | 35.0% (14) | 60% (6) | |
| High | 2.5% (1) | 10% (1) | |
| n/a | 5% (2) | 10% (1) | |
| MET-score (mean) | 725.2 (1006.7) | 1403.5 (890.4) | t = 1.854, p = .070 |
| MET-score (median) | 198.0 | 1386.0 | U = 83.5, p = .017 |
| 15.5 (3.5) | 16.7 (3.6) | t = 0.957, p = .34 | |
| unemployed | 62.5% (25) | 70% (7) | χ2 = 0.195 |
| part-time | 25% (10) | 20% (2) | |
| full-time | 12.5% (5) | 10% (1) | |
| physical health | 23.2 (10.1) | 53.4 (10.6) | t = 8.340, p < .001 |
| mental health | 47.1 (7.0) | 55.8 (4.6) | t = 4.769, p < .001 |
| years (mean) | 13.0 (9.31) | - | |
| years (median) | 10.5 | ||
| total | 90.15 (32.8) | - | |
| cognitive | 22.7 (9.9) | ||
| physical | 26.2 (7.6) | ||
| social | 41.2 (17.5) | ||
Unless otherwise noted, values represent mean and standard deviation (in parentheses). BMI = body mass index; IPAQ = International Physical Activity Questionnaire; MET = metabolically equivalent task; SF-36 = Medical Outcomes Study 36-item Short Form Health Survey; FIS = Fatigue Impact Scale.
a compared unemployed vs some employment (part or full-time).
Fig 1Quantitative flow imaging and data extraction.
A) example slice position; B) example magnitude image with position of blood vessels marked on one side (ICA = internal carotid artery, JV = jugular vein, VA = vertebral artery); C) phase image at maximum arterial velocity; D) example velocity profiles of selected reference voxels in right ICA; E) resulting correlation map with positions of reference profiles marked; F) final vessel mask after thresholding of correlation map.
Fig 2Group comparisons.
Group comparisons of orthostatic intolerance (A), intracranial compliance (B) and cerebral perfusion (C).
Fig 3Residual scatter plots.
(A) Relationship between OI and ICCI in the patient group. (B) Relationship between OI and CBF in the patient group. (C) Relationship between CBF and ICCI in the patient group, and (D) the control group. All scores were adjusted for effects of age and sex.