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Does oscillation size matter? Impact of added resistance on the cerebral pressure‐flow Relationship in females and males
Author(s) -
Newel Kailey T.,
Burma Joel S.,
Carere Joseph,
Kennedy Courtney M.,
Smirl Jonathan D.
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
physiological reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.918
H-Index - 39
ISSN - 2051-817X
DOI - 10.14814/phy2.15278
Subject(s) - cerebral autoregulation , squat , blood pressure , medicine , cardiology , transcranial doppler , middle cerebral artery , vascular resistance , diastole , systole , autoregulation , physical therapy , ischemia
Sinusoidal squat‐stand maneuvers (SSM) without resistance have been shown to produce ~30–50 mmHg swings in mean arterial pressure which are largely buffered in the brain via dynamic cerebral autoregulation (dCA). This study aimed to further elucidate how this regulatory mechanism is affected during SSM with added resistance (~20% bodyweight). Twenty‐five participants (sex/gender: 13 females/12 males) completed two bouts of 5‐min SSM for both bodyweight and resistance conditions (10% bodyweight in each arm) at frequencies of 0.05 Hz (20‐s squat/stand cycles) and 0.10 Hz (10‐s squat/stand cycles). Middle and posterior cerebral artery (MCA/PCA) cerebral blood velocities were indexed with transcranial Doppler ultrasound. Beat‐to‐beat blood pressure (BP) was quantified via finger photoplesmography. Transfer function analysis was employed to quantify dCA in both cerebral arteries across the cardiac cycle (diastole, mean, and systole). Two‐by‐two Analysis of Variance with generalized eta squared effect sizes were utilized to determine differences between resistance vs. bodyweight squats and between sexes/genders. Absolute mean and diastolic BP were elevated during the resistance squats ( p  < 0.001); however, only the BP point‐estimate power spectrum densities were augmented at 0.10 Hz ( p  < 0.048). No differences were noted for phase and gain metrics between bodyweight and resistance SSM ( p  > 0.067); however, females displayed attenuated systolic regulation ( p  < 0.003). Despite augmented systemic BP during resistance SSM, the brain was effective at buffering the additional stress to mitigate overperfusion/pressure. Females displayed less dCA regulation within the systolic aspect of the cardiac cycle, which may be associated with physiological underpinnings related to various clinical conditions/presentations.

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