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年龄、性别与脑搏动性和搏动性阻尼的血管贡献因素。

Age, sex, and the vascular contributors to cerebral pulsatility and pulsatile damping.

机构信息

Department of Exercise Science, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York.

Department of Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.

出版信息

J Appl Physiol (1985). 2020 Nov 1;129(5):1092-1101. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00500.2020. Epub 2020 Sep 17.

Abstract

Cerebral pulsatility reflects a balance between the transmission and damping of pulsatility in the cerebrovasculature. Females experience greater cerebral pulsatility with aging, which may have implications for sex differences in stroke risk and cognitive decline. This study sought to explore vascular contributors to cerebral pulsatility and pulsatile damping in men and women. Adults ( = 282, 53% female) underwent measurements of cerebral (middle cerebral artery) pulsatility, pulsatile damping (ratio of cerebral to carotid pulsatility), large artery stiffening (ratio of aortic to carotid pulse wave velocity), and carotid wave transmission/reflection dynamics using wave intensity analysis. Multiple regression revealed that older age, female sex, greater large artery stiffening, higher carotid pulse pressure, and greater forward wave energy was associated with increased cerebral pulsatility (adjusted R = 0.44, < 0.05). Contributors to decreased cerebral pulsatile damping included older age, female sex, and lower wave reflection index (adjusted R = 0.51, < 0.05). Our data link greater large artery stiffening, carotid pulse pressure, and forward wave energy to greater cerebral pulsatility, while greater carotid wave reflection may enhance cerebral pulsatile damping. Lower cerebral pulsatile damping among females may contribute to greater age-associated cerebral pulsatile burden compared with males. Cerebral pulsatility contributes to brain health and depends on a balance between transmission and damping of pulsatile hemodynamics into the cerebrovasculature. Our data indicate that cerebral pulsatility increases with age, female sex, extracranial artery stiffening, forward wave energy, and pulse pressure, whereas pulsatile damping decreases with age and female sex and increases with greater carotid wave reflections. These novel data identify pulsatile damping as a potential contributor to sex differences in cerebral pulsatile burden.

摘要

大脑搏动反映了脑脉管系统中搏动传递和衰减之间的平衡。女性随着年龄的增长,大脑搏动性增强,这可能对中风风险和认知能力下降的性别差异有影响。本研究旨在探讨男性和女性大脑搏动和搏动衰减的血管贡献因素。成年人(=282 人,53%为女性)接受大脑(大脑中动脉)搏动性、搏动衰减(大脑与颈动脉搏动比)、大动脉僵硬度(主动脉与颈动脉脉搏波速度比)以及颈动脉波传输/反射动力学的测量,采用波强分析。多元回归显示,年龄较大、女性、大动脉僵硬度较高、颈动脉脉搏压较高、正向波能量较大与大脑搏动性增加相关(调整后的 R2=0.44, < 0.05)。大脑搏动性衰减的原因包括年龄较大、女性和较低的波反射指数(调整后的 R2=0.51, < 0.05)。我们的数据将更大的大动脉僵硬度、颈动脉脉搏压和正向波能量与更大的大脑搏动性联系起来,而更大的颈动脉波反射可能增强大脑搏动性衰减。与男性相比,女性的大脑搏动性衰减可能导致与年龄相关的大脑搏动性负担更大。大脑搏动性与大脑健康有关,取决于搏动性血流动力学向脑脉管系统传递和衰减之间的平衡。我们的数据表明,大脑搏动性随年龄增长、女性、颅外动脉僵硬度、正向波能量和脉搏压增加而增加,而搏动性衰减随年龄和女性增加而减少,随颈动脉波反射增加而增加。这些新数据表明,搏动性衰减可能是大脑搏动性负担性别差异的一个潜在因素。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/b160/7790130/c7775ea19924/AJ-JAPP200009F001.jpg

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