Heart rate and respiration influence on macroscopic blood and CSF flows.
Fiche publication
Date publication
août 2017
Journal
Acta radiologica (Stockholm, Sweden : 1987)
Auteurs
Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Dr DAOUK Joël
Tous les auteurs :
Daouk J, Bouzerar R, Baledent O
Lien Pubmed
Résumé
Background Changes in blood volume in the intracranial arteries and the resulting oscillations of brain parenchyma have been presumed as main initiating factors of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pulsations. However, respiration has been recently supposed to influence CSF dynamics via thoracic pressure changes. Purpose To measure blood and CSF cervical flow and quantify the contribution of cardiac and respiratory cycles on the subsequent signal evolution. Material and Methods Sixteen volunteers were enrolled. All participant underwent two-dimensional fast field echo echo planar imaging (FFE-EPI). Regions of interest were placed on internal carotids, jugular veins, and rachidian canal to extract temporal profiles. Spectral analysis was performed to extract respiratory and cardiac frequencies. The contribution of respiration and cardiac activity was assessed to signal evolution by applying a multiple linear model. Results Mean respiratory frequency was 14.6 ± 3.9 cycles per min and mean heart rate was 66.8 ± 9 cycles per min. Cardiac contribution was higher than breathing for internal carotids, explaining 74.68% and 10.27% of the signal variance, respectively. For the jugular veins, respiratory component was higher than the cardiac one contributing 44.28% and 6.53% of the signal variance, respectively. For CSF, breathing and cardiac component contributed less than half of signal variance (12.61% and 23.23%, respectively). Conclusion Respiration and cardiac activity both influence fluid flow at the cervical level. Arterial inflow is driven by the cardiac pool whereas venous blood aspiration seems more due to thoracic pressure changes. CSF dynamics acts as a buffer between these two blood compartments.
Mots clés
Blood flow, cardiac activity, cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) dynamics, echo planar imaging (EPI), respiration
Référence
Acta Radiol. 2017 Aug;58(8):977-982