| Literature DB >> 34107079 |
Hannah G Caldwell1, Connor A Howe1, Ryan L Hoiland2,3, Jay M J R Carr1, Carter J Chalifoux1, Courtney V Brown1, Alexander Patrician1, Joshua C Tremblay1, Ronney B Panerai4, Thompson G Robinson4, Jatinder S Minhas4, Philip N Ainslie1.
Abstract
KEY POINTS: We investigated the influence of arterial P C O 2 ( P aC O 2 ) with and without acute experimental metabolic alkalosis on neurovascular coupling (NVC). We assessed stepwise iso-oxic alterations in P aC O 2 prior to and following intravenous NaHCO3 to acutely elevate arterial pH and [HCO3 - ]. The NVC response was not altered following NaHCO3 between stepwise P aC O 2 stages; therefore, NVC is acutely mediated by P aC O 2 rather than the prevailing arterial [H+ ]/pH. The NVC response was attenuated by 27-38% with -10 mmHg P aC O 2 and the absolute peak change was reduced by -19% with +10 mmHg P aC O 2 irrespective of acutely elevated arterial pH/[HCO3 - ]. The NVC kinetics (i.e. time to peak) were markedly slower with hypercapnia versus hypocapnia (24 ± 5 vs. 7 ± 5 s, respectively) likely indicating an influence of resting cerebrovascular tone on NVC responsiveness. ABSTRACT: Elevations in cerebral metabolism necessitate appropriate coordinated and localized increases in cerebral blood flow (i.e. neurovascular coupling; NVC). Recent pre-clinical work indicates that arterial P C O 2 ( P aC O 2 ) mediates NVC independently of arterial/extracellular pH; this has yet to be experimentally tested in humans. The goal of this study was to investigate the hypotheses that: (1) the NVC response would be unaffected by acute experimentally elevated arterial pH; rather, P aC O 2 would regulate any changes in NVC; and (2) stepwise respiratory alkalosis and acidosis would each progressively reduce the NVC response. Ten healthy males completed a standardized visual stimulus-evoked NVC test during matched stepwise iso-oxic alterations in P aC O 2 (hypocapnia: -5, -10 mmHg; hypercapnia: +5, +10 mmHg) prior to and following intravenous NaHCO3 (8.4%, 50 mEq/50 ml) that elevated arterial pH (7.406 ± 0.019 vs. 7.457 ± 0.029; P < 0.001) and [HCO3 - ] (26.2 ± 1.5 vs. 29.3 ± 0.9 mEq/l; P < 0.001). Although the NVC response was collectively attenuated by 27-38% with -10 mmHg P aC O 2 (stage post hoc: all P < 0.05), this response was unaltered following NaHCO3 (all P > 0.05) irrespective of the higher pH (P = 0.002) at each matched stage of P aC O 2 (P = 0.417). The absolute peak change was reduced by -19 ± 41% with +10 mmHg P aC O 2 irrespective of acutely elevated arterial pH/[HCO3 - ] (stage post hoc: P = 0.022). The NVC kinetics (i.e. time to peak) were markedly slower with hypercapnia versus hypocapnia (24 ± 5 vs. 7 ± 5 s, respectively; stage effect: P < 0.001). Overall, these findings indicate that temporal patterns in NVC are acutely regulated by P aC O 2 rather than arterial pH per se in the setting of acute metabolic alkalosis in humans.Entities:
Keywords: carbon dioxide; cerebral blood flow; humans; metabolic alkalosis; neurovascular coupling
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34107079 DOI: 10.1113/JP281615
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Physiol ISSN: 0022-3751 Impact factor: 5.182