Phase dynamics in cerebral autoregulation

1 Institute of Physics, Wroclaw University of Technology, Wroclaw; and 2 Department of Neurosurgery, Opole Regional Medical Center, Opole, Poland; and 3 Mathematical and Information Sciences Directorate, Army Research Office, Research Triangle, North Carolina Submitted 30 December 2004 ; accepted in...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology 2005-11, Vol.289 (5), p.H2272-H2279
Hauptverfasser: Latka, Miroslaw, Turalska, Malgorzata, Glaubic-Latka, Marta, Kolodziej, Waldemar, Latka, Dariusz, West, Bruce J
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container_end_page H2279
container_issue 5
container_start_page H2272
container_title American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology
container_volume 289
creator Latka, Miroslaw
Turalska, Malgorzata
Glaubic-Latka, Marta
Kolodziej, Waldemar
Latka, Dariusz
West, Bruce J
description 1 Institute of Physics, Wroclaw University of Technology, Wroclaw; and 2 Department of Neurosurgery, Opole Regional Medical Center, Opole, Poland; and 3 Mathematical and Information Sciences Directorate, Army Research Office, Research Triangle, North Carolina Submitted 30 December 2004 ; accepted in final form 21 June 2005 Complex continuous wavelet transforms are used to study the dynamics of instantaneous phase difference between the fluctuations of arterial blood pressure (ABP) and cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFV) in a middle cerebral artery. For healthy individuals, this phase difference changes slowly over time and has an almost uniform distribution for the very low-frequency (0.02–0.07 Hz) part of the spectrum. We quantify phase dynamics with the help of the synchronization index = sin 2 + cos 2 that may vary between 0 (uniform distribution of phase differences, so the time series are statistically independent of one another) and 1 (phase locking of ABP and CBFV, so the former drives the latter). For healthy individuals, the group-averaged index has two distinct peaks, one at 0.11 Hz [ = 0.59 ± 0.09] and another at 0.33 Hz ( = 0.55 ± 0.17). In the very low-frequency range (0.02–0.07 Hz), phase difference variability is an inherent property of an intact autoregulation system. Consequently, the average value of the synchronization parameter in this part of the spectrum is equal to 0.13 ± 0.03. The phase difference variability sheds new light on the nature of cerebral hemodynamics, which so far has been predominantly characterized with the help of the high-pass filter model. In this intrinsically stationary approach, based on the transfer function formalism, the efficient autoregulation is associated with the positive phase shift between oscillations of CBFV and ABP. However, the method is applicable only in the part of the spectrum (0.1–0.3 Hz) where the coherence of these signals is high. We point out that synchrony analysis through the use of wavelet transforms is more general and allows us to study nonstationary aspects of cerebral hemodynamics in the very low-frequency range where the physiological significance of autoregulation is most strongly pronounced. cerebral blood flow; transcranial Doppler sonography; wavelets; synchronization Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: M. Latka, Institute of Physics, Wroclaw Univ. of Technology, Wybrzeze Wyspianskiego 27, 50–370 Wroclaw, Poland (e-mail: Miroslaw.Latka{at}pwr.wroc.pl )
doi_str_mv 10.1152/ajpheart.01307.2004
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For healthy individuals, this phase difference changes slowly over time and has an almost uniform distribution for the very low-frequency (0.02–0.07 Hz) part of the spectrum. We quantify phase dynamics with the help of the synchronization index = sin 2 + cos 2 that may vary between 0 (uniform distribution of phase differences, so the time series are statistically independent of one another) and 1 (phase locking of ABP and CBFV, so the former drives the latter). For healthy individuals, the group-averaged index has two distinct peaks, one at 0.11 Hz [ = 0.59 ± 0.09] and another at 0.33 Hz ( = 0.55 ± 0.17). In the very low-frequency range (0.02–0.07 Hz), phase difference variability is an inherent property of an intact autoregulation system. Consequently, the average value of the synchronization parameter in this part of the spectrum is equal to 0.13 ± 0.03. 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In this intrinsically stationary approach, based on the transfer function formalism, the efficient autoregulation is associated with the positive phase shift between oscillations of CBFV and ABP. However, the method is applicable only in the part of the spectrum (0.1–0.3 Hz) where the coherence of these signals is high. We point out that synchrony analysis through the use of wavelet transforms is more general and allows us to study nonstationary aspects of cerebral hemodynamics in the very low-frequency range where the physiological significance of autoregulation is most strongly pronounced. cerebral blood flow; transcranial Doppler sonography; wavelets; synchronization Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: M. 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subjects Adult
Algorithms
Blood Pressure - physiology
Cerebrovascular Circulation - physiology
Female
Hemodynamics - physiology
Homeostasis - physiology
Humans
Male
Middle Cerebral Artery - diagnostic imaging
Middle Cerebral Artery - physiology
Models, Biological
Models, Statistical
Nonlinear Dynamics
Ultrasonography
title Phase dynamics in cerebral autoregulation
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