Vascular function in the aging human brain during muscle exertion

Maijian ZHU, Tania Xu Yar LEE, Yu-Wen HSIEH, Li-Fan LAI, Giancarlo CONDELLO, Cyril J. DONNELLY, Marc SMITH, Sareena Hanim HAMZAH, Boon-Hooi LIM, Chih-Yang HUANG, Nai-Fang CHI, Chia Hua KUO

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlespeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

To determine how brain oxygenation is stably maintained during advancing age, cerebral oxygenation and hemoglobin were measured real-time at 10 Hz using near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) at rest (30 seconds) and during a 10-repeated handgrip strength test (30 seconds) for 834 adults (M/F = 45/55%) aged 20–88 y. The amplitude of cerebral hemodynamic fluctuation was reflected by converting 300 values of % oxygen saturation and hemoglobin of each 30-second phase to standard deviation as indicatives of brain oxygenation variability (BOV) and brain hemodynamic variability (BHV) for each participant. Both BOV (+21–72%) and BHV (+94–158%) increased during the maximal voluntary muscle exertions for all age levels (α < 0.05), suggesting an increased vascular recruitment to maintain oxygen homeostasis in the brain. Intriguingly, BHV was >100 folds for both resting and challenged conditions (α < 0.001) in >80% of adults aged above 50 y despite similar BOV compared with young age counterparts, indicating a huge cost of amplifying hemodynamic oscillation to maintain a stable oxygenation in the aging brain. Since vascular endothelial cells are short-lived, our results implicate a hemodynamic compensation to emergence of daily deficits in replacing senescent endothelial cells after age 50 y. Copyright © 2022 Zhu et al. 

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3910-3920
JournalAging
Volume14
Issue number9
Early online dateMay 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Citation

Zhu, M., Lee, T. X. Y., Hsieh, Y.-W., Lai, L.-F., Condello, G., Donnelly, C. J., Smith, M., Hamzah, S. H., Lim, B.-H., Huang, C.-Y., Chi, N.-F., & Kuo, C. H. (2022). Vascular function in the aging human brain during muscle exertion. Aging, 14(9), 3910-3920. https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.204052

Keywords

  • Frailty
  • Vascular function
  • Muscle strength
  • Endothelial function
  • NIRS

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