2005
DOI: 10.1038/sj.jcbfm.9600159
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Spontaneous Slow Hemodynamic Oscillations are Impaired in Cerebral Microangiopathy

Abstract: Small-vessel disease or cerebral microangiopathy (CMA) is a common finding in elderly people. It is related to a variety of vascular risk factors and may finally lead to subcortical ischemic vascular dementia. Because vessel stiffness is increased, we hypothesized that slow spontaneous oscillations are reduced in cerebral hemodynamics. Accordingly, we examined spontaneous oscillations in the visual cortex of 13 patients suffering from CMA, and compared them with 14 agematched controls. As an imaging method we … Show more

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Cited by 62 publications
(35 citation statements)
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References 47 publications
(80 reference statements)
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“…A similar result was demonstrated in cohort of patients with sepsis taking ABP instead of CPP for calculation. 18 This good agreement of TCD-and NIRS-based CA assessment is a direct consequence of the finding that NIRS-based cerebral oximetry is able to detect intracranial slow fluctuations in its modalities, 15,16 which are highly coherent with slow waves recorded in MCA blood flow velocity ( Figure 1A). 18 In the past, it has been criticized that the NIRS measurements are also affected by skin and bone oxygenation changes, but the underlying mathematical models of a new generation of monitors and in particular of NIRO 200 are able to exclude the extracranial component efficiently.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…A similar result was demonstrated in cohort of patients with sepsis taking ABP instead of CPP for calculation. 18 This good agreement of TCD-and NIRS-based CA assessment is a direct consequence of the finding that NIRS-based cerebral oximetry is able to detect intracranial slow fluctuations in its modalities, 15,16 which are highly coherent with slow waves recorded in MCA blood flow velocity ( Figure 1A). 18 In the past, it has been criticized that the NIRS measurements are also affected by skin and bone oxygenation changes, but the underlying mathematical models of a new generation of monitors and in particular of NIRO 200 are able to exclude the extracranial component efficiently.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…NIRS provides valuable information not only through the magnitudes of the measured parameters but also as a trend measurement. Such measurements in healthy adults have revealed slow oscillations in cerebral NIRS recordings [4], which are known to be impaired by pathological conditions like Alzheimer’s disease [5], cerebral microangiopathy [6] and cerebral infarction [7]. Their frequencies are distinctly below the heart rate and respiration frequencies, they are spontaneous and their origin is controversial [4].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This analysis covered un-averaged data and was independent of functional stimulation that may bias results. Correlation during rest is presumably based on spontaneous vascular oscillations related to vasomotion, such as low and very low frequency oscillations and on oscillations related to respiration (Colantuoni et al, 1994;Obrig et al, 2000a;Schroeter et al, 2004bSchroeter et al, , 2005. With an effective sampling rate of 1 Hz, oscillations due to heart pulsations did not influence our measurements.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%