Bush Adam M, Borzage Matthew T, Choi Soyoung, Václavů Lena, Tamrazi Benita, Nederveen Aart J, Coates Thomas D, Wood John C
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Southern California, California.
Division of Neonatology and Radiology, Children's Hospital Los Angeles, California.
Am J Hematol. 2016 Sep;91(9):912-7. doi: 10.1002/ajh.24441. Epub 2016 Jul 4.
Stroke is common in children with sickle cell disease and results from an imbalance in oxygen supply and demand. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) is increased in patients with sickle cell disease to compensate for their anemia, but adequacy of their oxygen delivery has not been systematically demonstrated. This study examined the physiological determinants of CBF in 37 patients with sickle cell disease, 38 ethnicity matched control subjects and 16 patients with anemia of non-sickle origin. Cerebral blood flow was measured using phase contrast MRI of the carotid and vertebral arteries. CBF increased inversely to oxygen content (r(2) = 0.69, P < 0.0001). Brain oxygen delivery, the product of CBF and oxygen content, was normal in all groups. Brain composition, specifically the relative amounts of grey and white matter, was the next strongest CBF predictor, presumably by influencing cerebral metabolic rate. Grey matter/white matter ratio and CBF declined monotonically until the age of 25 in all subjects, consistent with known maturational changes in brain composition. Further CBF reductions were observed with age in subjects older than 35 years of age, likely reflecting microvascular aging. On multivariate regression, CBF was independent of disease state, hemoglobin S, hemoglobin F, reticulocyte count and cell free hemoglobin, suggesting that it is regulated similarly in patients and control subjects. In conclusion, sickle cell disease patients had sufficient oxygen delivery at rest, but accomplish this only by marked increases in their resting CBF, potentially limiting their ability to further augment flow in response to stress. Am. J. Hematol. 91:912-917, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
中风在镰状细胞病患儿中很常见,是由氧气供需失衡导致的。镰状细胞病患者的脑血流量(CBF)会增加以代偿其贫血,但他们的氧气输送充足性尚未得到系统证实。本研究检测了37例镰状细胞病患者、38例种族匹配的对照受试者以及16例非镰状细胞起源贫血患者的CBF生理决定因素。使用颈动脉和椎动脉的相位对比MRI测量脑血流量。CBF与氧含量呈负相关(r(2) = 0.69,P < 0.0001)。所有组的脑氧输送(CBF与氧含量的乘积)均正常。脑成分,特别是灰质和白质的相对含量,是下一个最强的CBF预测指标,可能是通过影响脑代谢率。所有受试者的灰质/白质比值和CBF在25岁之前单调下降,这与已知的脑成分成熟变化一致。在35岁以上的受试者中,随着年龄增长观察到CBF进一步降低,这可能反映了微血管老化。在多变量回归分析中,CBF独立于疾病状态、血红蛋白S、血红蛋白F、网织红细胞计数和游离血红蛋白,这表明患者和对照受试者的CBF调节方式相似。总之,镰状细胞病患者在静息状态下有足够的氧输送,但这仅通过显著增加静息CBF来实现,这可能会限制他们在应激时进一步增加血流量的能力。《美国血液学杂志》91:912 - 917,2016年。© 2016威利期刊公司