Assessment of cerebral autoregulatory function and inter-hemispheric blood flow in
older adults with internal carotid artery stenosis using transcranial Doppler sonography-based
measurement of transient hyperemic response after carotid artery compression
(Open access funding provided by Semmelweis University)
(K129277) Támogató: NKFI
(TKP2021-NKTA-47)
(RRF-2.3.1-21-2022-00003)
TKP2021-EGA-37(TKP2021-EGA-37)
(TKP2021-NVA)
(K 132596 K_19) Támogató: OTKA
(NRDI TKP2021-EGA)
(Post-Covid 2021–34.) Támogató: MTA
Unhealthy vascular aging promotes atherogenesis, which may lead to significant internal
carotid artery stenosis (CAS) in 5 to 7.5% of older adults. The pathogenic factors
that promote accelerated vascular aging and CAS also affect the downstream portion
of the cerebral microcirculation in these patients. Primary treatments of significant
CAS are eversion endarterectomy or endarterectomy with patch plasty. Factors that
determine adequate hemodynamic compensation and thereby the clinical consequences
of CAS as well as medical and surgical complications of carotid reconstruction surgery
likely involve the anatomy of the circle of Willis (CoW), the magnitude of compensatory
inter-hemispheric blood flow, and the effectiveness of cerebral microcirculatory blood
flow autoregulation. This study aimed to test two hypotheses based on this theory.
First, we hypothesized that patients with symptomatic and asymptomatic CAS would exhibit
differences in autoregulatory function and inter-hemispheric blood flow. Second, we
predicted that anatomically compromised CoW would associate with impaired inter-hemispheric
blood flow compensation. We enrolled older adults with symptomatic or asymptomatic
internal CAS (>70% NASCET criteria; n = 46) and assessed CoW integrity by CT angiography.
We evaluated transient hyperemic responses in the middle cerebral arteries (MCA) after
common carotid artery compression (CCC; 10 s) by transcranial Doppler sonography (TCD).
We compared parameters reflecting autoregulatory function (e.g., transient hyperemic
response ratio [THRR], return to baseline time [RTB], changes of vascular resistance)
and inter-hemispheric blood flow (residual blood flow velocity). Our findings revealed
that CAS was associated with impaired cerebral vascular reactivity. However, we did
not observe significant differences in autoregulatory function or inter-hemispheric
blood flow between patients with symptomatic and asymptomatic CAS. Moreover, anatomically
compromised CoW did not significantly affect these parameters. Notably, we observed
an inverse correlation between RTB and THRR, and 49% of CAS patients exhibited a delayed
THRR, which associated with decreased inter-hemispheric blood flow. Future studies
should investigate how TCD-based evaluation of autoregulatory function and inter-hemispheric
blood flow can be used to optimize surgical techniques and patient selection for internal
carotid artery revascularization.