Lag-Optimized Blood Oxygenation Level Dependent Cerebrovascular Reactivity Estimates Derived From Breathing Task Data Have a Stronger Relationship With Baseline Cerebral Blood Flow
Data
2022Egilea
Stickland, Rachael C.
Zvolanek, Kristina M.
Moia, Stefano
Caballero-Gaudes, César
G. Bright, Molly
Stickland RC, Zvolanek KM, Moia S, Caballero-Gaudes C and Bright MG (2022) Lag-Optimized Blood Oxygenation Level Dependent Cerebrovascular Reactivity Estimates Derived From Breathing Task Data Have a Stronger Relationship With Baseline Cerebral Blood Flow. Front. Neurosci. 16:910025. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2022.910025
Laburpena
Cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR), an important indicator of cerebrovascular health,
is commonly studied with the Blood Oxygenation Level Dependent functional MRI
(BOLD-fMRI) response to a vasoactive stimulus. Theoretical and empirical evidence
suggests that baseline cerebral blood flow (CBF) modulates BOLD signal amplitude
and may influence BOLD-CVR estimates. We address how acquisition and modeling
choices affect the relationship between baseline cerebral blood flow (bCBF) and
BOLD-CVR: whether BOLD-CVR is modeled with the inclusion of a breathing task,
and whether BOLD-CVR amplitudes are optimized for hemodynamic lag effects. We
assessed between-subject correlations of average GM values and within-subject spatial
correlations across cortical regions. Our results suggest that a breathing task addition to
a resting-state acquisition, alongside lag-optimization within BOLD-CVR modeling, can
improve BOLD-CVR correlations with bCBF, both between- and within-subjects, likely
because these CVR estimates are more physiologically accurate. We report positive
correlations between bCBF and BOLD-CVR, both between- and within-subjects. The
physiological explanation of this positive correlation is unclear; research with larger
samples and tightly controlled vasoactive stimuli is needed. Insights into what drives
variability in BOLD-CVR measurements and related measurements of cerebrovascular
function are particularly relevant when interpreting results in populations with altered
vascular and/or metabolic baselines or impaired cerebrovascular reserve.