Key points Preclinical models have demonstrated that nitric oxide is a key component of neurovascular coupling; this has yet to be translated to humans. We conducted two separate protocols utilizing intravenous infusion of a nitric oxide synthase inhibitor and isovolumic haemodilution to assess the influence of nitric oxide on neurovascular coupling in humans. Isovolumic haemodilution did not alter neurovascular coupling. Intravenous infusion of a nitric oxide synthase inhibitor reduced the neurovascular coupling response by ∼30%, indicating that nitric oxide is integral to neurovascular coupling in humans. Abstract Nitric oxide is a vital neurovascular signalling molecule in preclinical models, yet the mechanisms underlying neurovascular coupling (NVC) in humans have yet to be elucidated. To investigate the contribution of nitric oxide to NVC in humans, we utilized a visual stimulus paradigm to elicit an NVC response in the posterior cerebral circulation. Two distinct mechanistic interventions were conducted on young healthy males: (1) NVC was assessed during intravenous infusion of saline (placebo) and the non‐selective competitive nitric oxide synthase inhibitor NG‐monomethyl‐l‐arginine (l‐NMMA, 5 mg kg−1 bolus & subsequent 50 μg kg−1 min−1 maintenance dose; n = 10). The order of infusion was randomized, counterbalanced and single blinded. A subset of participants in this study (n = 4) underwent a separate intervention with phenylephrine infusion to independently consider the influence of blood pressure changes on NVC (0.1–0.6 μg kg−1 min−1 constant infusion). (2) NVC was assessed prior to and following isovolumic haemodilution, whereby 20% of whole blood was removed and replaced with 5% human serum albumin to reduce haemoglobin concentration (n = 8). For both protocols, arterial and internal jugular venous blood samples were collected at rest and coupled with volumetric measures of cerebral blood flow (duplex ultrasound) to quantify resting cerebral metabolic parameters. l‐NMMA elicited a 30% reduction in the peak (P = 0.01), but not average (P = 0.11), NVC response. Neither phenylephrine nor haemodilution influenced NVC. Nitric oxide signalling is integral to NVC in humans, providing a new direction for research into pharmacological treatment of humans with dementia.
In 1959, Niels Lassen illustrated the cerebral autoregulation curve in the classic review article entitled Cerebral Blood Flow and Oxygen Consumption in Man. This concept suggested a relatively broad mean arterial pressure range (~60–150 mmHg) wherein cerebral blood flow remains constant. However, the assumption that this wide cerebral autoregulation plateau could be applied on a within‐individual basis is incorrect and greatly variable between individuals. Indeed, each data point on the autoregulatory curve originated from independent samples of participants and patients and represented interindividual relationships between cerebral blood flow and mean arterial pressure. Nonetheless, this influential concept remains commonly cited and illustrated in various high‐impact publications and medical textbooks, and is frequently taught in medical and science education without appropriate nuances and caveats. Herein, we provide the rationale and additional experimental data supporting the notion we need to lose this dogmatic view of cerebral autoregulation.
Recent work demonstrated an influence of ventilation on cerebrovascular reactivity to CO 2 ; however, the concomitant influence of changes in mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) on ventilation-induced differences in cerebral blood flow (CBF) has yet to be examined in this context.Healthy participants (n = 15; 25 ± 3 years of age; 179 ± 6 cm height; 74 ± 10 kg weight; 3 female) underwent end-tidal forcing to increase their partial pressure of end-tidal CO 2 by +3, +6 and +9 mmHg above baseline in 5-min sequential steps while maintaining iso-oxia. This protocol was then repeated twice, with participants hyperventilating and hypoventilating by ∼30% compared to the first trial. Intra-cranial and extra-cranial CBF were measured using ultrasound. The MAP (finger photo-plethysmography) was higher during the hyperventilation and hypoventilation trials compared to normal ventilation (main effects, P < 0.05 for both). While internal carotid artery blood flow was higher during the hyperventilation trial compared to normal ventilation (P = 0.01), this was due to a higher MAP, as indicated by analysis of conductance values (P = 0.68) or inclusion of MAP in covariate analysis (P = 0.11). Global CBF (P = 0.11) and vertebral artery blood flow (P = 0.93) were unaffected by the magnitude of ventilation. Further, CO 2 reactivity was not affected by the different breathing trials (P > 0.05 for all). Retrospective analysis of a larger data set (n = 53) confirmed these observations and demonstrated no relationships between the ventilatory and global CBF response to hypercapnia (r 2 = 0.04; P = 0.14). Therefore, when differences in MAP are accounted for, cerebrovascular CO 2 reactivity (assessed via end-tidal forcing) is independent of the magnitude of ventilation.
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