Middle cerebral artery dynamic cerebral autoregulation is impaired by infarctions in the anterior but not the posterior cerebral artery territory in patients with mild strokes

Transl Neurosci. 2023 Apr 1;14(1):20220278. doi: 10.1515/tnsci-2022-0278. eCollection 2023 Jan 1.

Abstract

Objective: The aim of this study was to ascertain whether dynamic cerebral autoregulation (CA) in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) is disturbed by cerebral infarctions outside the MCA territory.

Methods: We estimated transfer function parameters gain and phase from simultaneous recordings of spontaneous oscillation in blood pressure and MCA cerebral blood flow velocity in 10 consecutive patients with isolated anterior cerebral artery (ACA) infarctions and in 22 consecutive patients with isolated posterior cerebral artery (PCA) infarctions. All ACA infarctions were in the motor, premotor, or supplementary motor cortex areas and presented with pronounced leg hemiparesis. Twenty-eight age- and sex-matched healthy subjects served as controls.

Results: Compared to controls, phase was significantly reduced in the MCA ipsilateral to the lesion site and in the contralateral MCA (unaffected hemisphere) in the very low (0.02-0.07 Hz) and low (0.07-0.15 Hz) frequency ranges in the ACA infarctions but not in the PCA infarctions. Gain was reduced only in the very low frequency range in the MCA contralateral to the ACA lesion site. Systemic factors were unrelated to phase and gain results.

Conclusion: Bilateral impairment of MCA dynamic CA in patients with a unilateral ACA infarction is frequent.

Keywords: brain connectivity network; neuroscience; stroke; transfer function; ultrasound.