Kang Daehun, Uchida Koji, Haider Clifton R, Campeau Norbert G, In Myung-Ho, Gray Erin M, Trzasko Joshua D, Welker Kirk M, Gunter Jeffrey L, Bernstein Matt A, Trenerry Max R, Holmes David R, Joyner Michael J, Curry Timothy B, Huston John, Shu Yunhong
Department of Radiology, Mayo Clinic, 200 First St. SW, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.
Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine, Mayo Clinic, 200 First St. SW, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.
Neuroimage. 2025 Aug 1;316:121302. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2025.121302. Epub 2025 Jun 3.
Acute exposure to severe hypoxia impairs cognitive performance, yet the integrated brain mechanisms underlying this temporary decline remain unclear. This study examined regional variations in cerebral oxygen metabolism during acute hypoxia and their relationship to cognitive impairment. Eleven young, healthy participants (26.5 ± 4.5 years old) performed the Go/No-Go task during two sessions, each of which includes three minutes of hypoxia (FiO = 7.7 %). Cerebral blood flow (CBF) was assessed using pCASL MRI in one session, while blood-oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD) signals were acquired in another. Fractional changes in CBF (δCBF) and BOLD (δBOLD) were combined using a modified Davis model, adjusted for physiological differences between normoxia and acute and severe hypoxia, to calculate the fractional change in cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen (δCMRO). Group-level z-normalized δCMRO maps revealed significant regional heterogeneity, with most pronounced reductions in areas associated with the dorsal and ventral attention networks and executive frontoparietal networks. These regions exhibited δCMRO reductions exceeding the hemispheric average (-9.6 ± 7.9 %) and were associated with increased commission errors during the Go/No-Go task, reflecting impaired inhibitory control and sustained attention. This study highlights the brain's adaptive prioritization of certain networks under oxygen deprivation, providing insights into the physiological mechanisms underlying hypoxia-induced cognitive impairments. These findings enhance our understanding of how acute hypoxia affects brain function, emphasizing the importance of network-specific adaptations in maintaining cognitive performance during oxygen deprivation.
急性暴露于严重缺氧环境会损害认知能力,但这种暂时下降背后的综合脑机制仍不清楚。本研究考察了急性缺氧期间脑氧代谢的区域差异及其与认知障碍的关系。11名年轻健康参与者(26.5±4.5岁)在两个阶段执行了Go/No-Go任务,每个阶段包括三分钟的缺氧(FiO = 7.7%)。在一个阶段使用动脉自旋标记磁共振成像(pCASL MRI)评估脑血流量(CBF),而在另一个阶段采集血氧水平依赖(BOLD)信号。使用改良的戴维斯模型将CBF(δCBF)和BOLD(δBOLD)的分数变化进行合并,并针对常氧与急性和严重缺氧之间的生理差异进行调整,以计算脑氧代谢率(δCMRO)的分数变化。组水平的z标准化δCMRO图显示出显著的区域异质性,与背侧和腹侧注意网络以及执行额顶叶网络相关的区域减少最为明显。这些区域的δCMRO降低超过半球平均水平(-9.6±7.9%),并且与Go/No-Go任务期间的错误率增加相关,反映出抑制控制和持续注意力受损。本研究强调了大脑在缺氧状态下对某些网络的适应性优先排序,为缺氧诱导的认知障碍的生理机制提供了见解。这些发现加深了我们对急性缺氧如何影响脑功能的理解,强调了在缺氧期间维持认知能力时特定网络适应性的重要性。