The Cumulative Influence of Hyperoxia and Hypercapnia on Blood Oxygenation and R2

  • Carlos C. Faraco
  • , Megan K. Strother
  • , JCW Siero
  • , Daniel F. Arteaga
  • , Allison O. Scott
  • , Lori C. Jordan
  • , Manus J. Donahue*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR)-weighted blood-oxygenation-level-dependent magnetic resonance imaging (BOLD-MRI) experiments are frequently used in conjunction with hyperoxia. Owing to complex interactions between hyperoxia and hypercapnia, quantitative effects of these gas mixtures on BOLD responses, blood and tissue R-2*, and blood oxygenation are incompletely understood. Here we performed BOLD imaging (3 T; TE/TR = 35/2,000 ms; spatial resolution = 3 x 3 x 3.5 mm(3)) in healthy volunteers (n = 12; age = 29 +/- 4.1 years) breathing (i) room air (RA), (ii) normocapnic-hyperoxia (95% O-2/5% N-2, HO), (iii) hypercapnic-normoxia (5% CO2/21% O-2/74% N-2, HC-NO), and (iv) hypercapnic-hyperoxia (5% CO2/95% O-2, HC-HO). For HC-HO, experiments were performed with separate RA and HO baselines to control for changes in O2. T-2-relaxation-under-spin-tagging MRI was used to calculate basal venous oxygenation. Signal changes were quantified and established hemodynamic models were applied to quantify vasoactive blood oxygenation, blood-water R-2(*), and tissue-water R-2*. In the cortex, fractional BOLD changes (stimulus/baseline) were HO/RA = 0.011 +/- 0.007; HC-NO/RA = 0.014 +/- 0.004; HC-HO/HO = 0.020 +/- 0.008; and HC-HO/RA = 0.035 +/- 0.010; for the measured basal venous oxygenation level of 0.632, this led to venous blood oxygenation levels of 0.660 (HO), 0.665 (HC-NO), and 0.712 (HC-HO). Interleaving a HC-HO stimulus with HO baseline provided a smaller but significantly elevated BOLD response compared with a HC-NO stimulus. Results provide an outline for how blood oxygenation differs for several gas stimuli and provides quantitative information on how hypercapnic BOLD CVR and R-2(*) are altered during hyperoxia.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2032-2042
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism
Volume35
Issue number12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2015

Keywords

  • BOLD
  • cerebrovascular reactivity
  • hypercapnia
  • hyperoxia
  • R-2*
  • STENO-OCCLUSIVE DISEASE
  • CEREBROVASCULAR REACTIVITY
  • INTRACRANIAL STENOSIS
  • BEHAVIORAL STATE
  • MOYAMOYA-DISEASE
  • STEAL PHENOMENON
  • WHITE-MATTER
  • HUMAN BRAIN
  • TRUST MRI
  • FLOW

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