Center for BrainHealth, School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences, The University of Texas at Dallas, Dallas, TX, USA; Department of Biological Sciences, The University of Texas at Dallas, Dallas, TX, USA.
Center for BrainHealth, School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences, The University of Texas at Dallas, Dallas, TX, USA.
Neuroimage. 2020 Jul 15;215:116812. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.116812. Epub 2020 Apr 8.
Behavioral studies investigating fundamental cognitive abilities provide evidence that processing speed accounts for large proportions of performance variability between individuals. Processing speed decline is a hallmark feature of the cognitive disruption observed in healthy aging and in demyelinating diseases such as multiple sclerosis (MS), neuromyelitis optica, and Wilson's disease. Despite the wealth of evidence suggesting a central role for processing speed in cognitive decline, the neural mechanisms of this fundamental ability remain unknown. Intact neurovascular coupling, acute localized blood flow increases following neural activity, is essential for optimal neural function. We hypothesized that efficient coupling forms the neural basis of processing speed. Because MS features neural-glial-vascular system disruption, we used it as a model to test this hypothesis. To assess the integrity of the coupling system, we measured blood-oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD) signal in healthy controls (HCs) and MS patients using a 3T MRI scanner while they viewed radial checkerboards that flickered periodically at 8 Hz. To assess processing speed and cognitive function, we administered a battery of neuropsychological tests. While MS patients exhibited reduced ΔBOLD with reductions in processing speed, no such relationships were observed in HCs. To further investigate the mechanisms that underlie ΔBOLD-processing speed relationships, we assessed the physiologic components that constitute ΔBOLD signal (i.e., cerebral blood flow, ΔCBF; cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen, ΔCMRO; neurovascular coupling ratio) in speed-preserved and -impaired MS patients. While ΔCBF and ΔCMRO showed no group-differences, the neurovascular coupling ratio was significantly reduced in speed-impaired MS patients compared to speed-preserved MS patients. Together, these results suggest that neurovascular uncoupling might underlie cognitive slowing in MS and might be the central pathogenic mechanism governing processing speed decline.
行为研究调查基本认知能力提供证据表明,处理速度占个体之间表现差异的很大比例。处理速度下降是健康衰老和脱髓鞘疾病(如多发性硬化症、视神经脊髓炎和威尔逊病)中观察到的认知障碍的标志特征。尽管有大量证据表明处理速度在认知能力下降中起着核心作用,但这种基本能力的神经机制仍不清楚。完整的神经血管偶联,即神经活动后急性局部血流增加,是最佳神经功能的必要条件。我们假设有效的偶联形成了处理速度的神经基础。由于多发性硬化症具有神经胶质血管系统破坏的特征,我们使用它作为模型来检验这一假设。为了评估偶联系统的完整性,我们使用 3T MRI 扫描仪在健康对照组 (HCs) 和多发性硬化症患者观看周期性闪烁 8 Hz 径向棋盘时测量其血氧水平依赖 (BOLD) 信号。为了评估处理速度和认知功能,我们进行了一系列神经心理学测试。多发性硬化症患者的 ΔBOLD 与处理速度降低相关,而 HCs 则没有观察到这种关系。为了进一步研究支持 ΔBOLD-处理速度关系的机制,我们评估了构成 ΔBOLD 信号的生理成分(即脑血流、ΔCBF;脑氧代谢率、ΔCMRO;神经血管偶联比)在速度保留和速度受损的多发性硬化症患者中。虽然 ΔCBF 和 ΔCMRO 没有组间差异,但速度受损的多发性硬化症患者的神经血管偶联比显著低于速度保留的多发性硬化症患者。这些结果表明,神经血管解偶联可能是多发性硬化症认知减速的基础,可能是控制处理速度下降的中心致病机制。