| Literature DB >> 32719617 |
Marc Kermorgant1, Nathalie Nasr1,2, Marek Czosnyka3,4, Dina N Arvanitis1, Ophélie Hélissen1, Jean-Michel Senard1,5, Anne Pavy-Le Traon1,2.
Abstract
It is well known that exposure to microgravity in astronauts leads to a plethora physiological responses such as headward fluid shift, body unloading, and cardiovascular deconditioning. When astronauts return to Earth, some encounter problems related to orthostatic intolerance. An impaired cerebral autoregulation (CA), which could be compromised by the effects of microgravity, has been proposed as one of the mechanisms responsible for orthostatic intolerance. CA is a homeostatic mechanism that maintains cerebral blood flow for any variations in cerebral perfusion pressure by adapting the vascular tone and cerebral vessel diameter. The ground-based models of microgravity are useful tools for determining the gravitational impact of spaceflight on human body. The head-down tilt bed rest (HDTBR), where the subject remains in supine position at -6 degrees for periods ranging from few days to several weeks is the most commonly used ground-based model of microgravity for cardiovascular deconditioning. head-down bed rest (HDBR) is able to replicate cephalic fluid shift, immobilization, confinement, and inactivity. Dry immersion (DI) model is another approach where the subject remains immersed in thermoneutral water covered with an elastic waterproof fabric separating the subject from the water. Regarding DI, this analog imitates absence of any supporting structure for the body, centralization of body fluids, immobilization and hypokinesia observed during spaceflight. However, little is known about the impact of microgravity on CA. Here, we review the fundamental principles and the different mechanisms involved in CA. We also consider the different approaches in order to assess CA. Finally, we focus on the effects of short- and long-term spaceflight on CA and compare these findings with two specific analogs to microgravity: HDBR and DI.Entities:
Keywords: cerebral autoregulation; dry immersion; head-down bed rest; microgravity; spaceflight analog
Year: 2020 PMID: 32719617 PMCID: PMC7350784 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2020.00778
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
FIGURE 1Theoretical cerebral autoregulation curve with the autoregulation plateau where cerebral blood flow remains constant with the upper and lower limits of the autoregulatory range.
List of authors and the methods used to assess cerebral autoregulation in spaceflight.
| CBF | 6 crewmembers | 185 days | |
| MCA blood flow velocity | 4 crewmembers | N/A | |
| CFR, QCA, RCA | 6 cosmonauts | 6 months | |
| QCA, RCA | 1–9 men + 1 woman | 2 days to 6 months | |
| MCA blood flow velocity, CBFV, TFA (VLF, LF, HF) | 6 men | 1–2 weeks | |
| CBF | 26 cosmonauts | 8–438 days | |
| MCAv, CR, TFA (VLF, LF) | 20 men + 7 women | 8–16 days | |
| CBFV, CR, PI | 6 men + 1 woman | 58–199 days | |
| JVBF | 9 men + 2 women | 210 ± 76 days |
List of authors and the methods used to assess cerebral autoregulation in analogs to spaceflight.
| rCBF | 4 men | 7 days | 4° HDT | |
| rCBF | 6 men | 7 days | 4° HDT | |
| CBFV | 6 subjects | 5 min | 6° HDT | |
| MCA blood flow velocity | 9 men | 2 days | 10° HDT | |
| CBFV | 8 men | 1 day | 6° HDT | |
| CBF | Men | N/A | 6° HDT | |
| MCAv, CR | 12 men | 28 days | 6° HDT | |
| MCAv | 10 subjects | 10 min | 10° HDT | |
| CBFV | 11 men + 1 woman | 14 days | 6° HDT | |
| MCAv, CFR | 8 men | 4 days | 6° HDT | |
| CBFV, PI | 11 men + 2 women | 1 min | 80° HDT | |
| QCA, RCA | 6 to 19 men | 1 h to 42 days | 6° HDT | |
| CBF, CR | 12 men | 21 days | 6° HDT | |
| ACAv, MCAv, PCAv, PI, RI | 6 men | 21 days | 6° HDT | |
| MCAv, CR | 8 women | 7 days | 6° HDT | |
| MCAv | 8 men | 4 days | 6° HDT | |
| CBFV | 8 men | 1 day | 6° HDT | |
| CBFV | 12 men | 21 days | 6° HDT | |
| MCAv, CR, ARMA | 24 women | 60 days | 6° HDT | |
| CBFV, S/D, PI, RI | 12 men | 4 days | 6° HDT | |
| MCAv, PCAv, CR, TFA (VLF, LF) | 17 men + 4 women | >7–8 min | 90°HDT | |
| TFA (VLF, LF, HF) | 18 men + 3 women | 18 days | 6° HDT | |
| CBFV | 10 men and women | 15 s | 10°, 25°, and 55° HDT | |
| Blood flow velocity | 9 men | 4.5 h | 6°, 12°, and 18° HDT | |
| TFA (VLF, LF, HF), Mxa | 12 men | 3 days | DI | |
| CBF | 12 men | 3 days | DI | |
| MCAv, TFA (VLF, LF), Mxa | 12 men | 21 days | 6° HDT |