Van Lieshout Johannes J, Wieling Wouter, Karemaker John M, Secher Niels H
Cardiovascular Research Institute Amsterdam and Departments of Medicine and Physiology, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, 1105 AZ Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2003 Mar;94(3):833-48. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00260.2002.
During standing, both the position of the cerebral circulation and the reductions in mean arterial pressure (MAP) and cardiac output challenge cerebral autoregulatory (CA) mechanisms. Syncope is most often associated with the upright position and can be provoked by any condition that jeopardizes cerebral blood flow (CBF) and regional cerebral tissue oxygenation (cO(2)Hb). Reflex (vasovagal) responses, cardiac arrhythmias, and autonomic failure are common causes. An important defense against a critical reduction in the central blood volume is that of muscle activity ("the muscle pump"), and if it is not applied even normal humans faint. Continuous tracking of CBF by transcranial Doppler-determined cerebral blood velocity (V(mean)) and near-infrared spectroscopy-determined cO(2)Hb contribute to understanding the cerebrovascular adjustments to postural stress; e.g., MAP does not necessarily reflect the cerebrovascular phenomena associated with (pre)syncope. CA may be interpreted as a frequency-dependent phenomenon with attenuated transfer of oscillations in MAP to V(mean) at low frequencies. The clinical implication is that CA does not respond to rapid changes in MAP; e.g., there is a transient fall in V(mean) on standing up and therefore a feeling of lightheadedness that even healthy humans sometimes experience. In subjects with recurrent vasovagal syncope, dynamic CA seems not different from that of healthy controls even during the last minutes before the syncope. Redistribution of cardiac output may affect cerebral perfusion by increased cerebral vascular resistance, supporting the view that cerebral perfusion depends on arterial inflow pressure provided that there is a sufficient cardiac output.
站立时,脑循环的位置以及平均动脉压(MAP)和心输出量的降低都会对脑自动调节(CA)机制构成挑战。晕厥最常与直立位相关,任何危及脑血流量(CBF)和局部脑组织氧合(cO₂Hb)的情况都可能诱发晕厥。反射性(血管迷走性)反应、心律失常和自主神经功能衰竭是常见原因。防止中心血容量严重减少的一项重要防御机制是肌肉活动(“肌肉泵”),如果不运用该机制,即使正常人也会昏厥。通过经颅多普勒测定的脑血流速度(Vmean)和近红外光谱测定的cO₂Hb持续追踪CBF,有助于理解脑血管对体位应激的调节;例如,MAP不一定反映与(预)晕厥相关的脑血管现象。CA可被解释为一种频率依赖性现象,在低频时MAP振荡向Vmean的传递减弱。其临床意义在于CA对MAP的快速变化无反应;例如,站立时Vmean会短暂下降,因此即使健康人有时也会感到头晕。在复发性血管迷走性晕厥患者中,即使在晕厥前的最后几分钟,动态CA似乎与健康对照者并无差异。心输出量的重新分布可能通过增加脑血管阻力来影响脑灌注,这支持了以下观点:只要有足够的心输出量,脑灌注就取决于动脉流入压。