Oxygen consumption and blood flow coupling in human motor cortex during intense finger tapping: Implication for a role of lactate

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Abstract

Rates of cerebral blood flow (CBF) and glucose consumption (CMR glc) rise in cerebral cortex during continuous stimulation, while the oxygen-glucose index (OGI) declines as an index of mismatched coupling of oxygen consumption (cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen-CMRO 2) to CBF and CMR glc. To test whether the mismatch reflects a specific role of aerobic glycolysis during functional brain activation, we determined CBF and CMRO 2 with positron emission tomography (PET) when 12 healthy volunteers executed finger-to-thumb apposition of the right hand. Movements began 1, 10, or 20 minutes before administration of the radiotracers. In primary and supplementary motor cortices and cerebellum, CBF had increased at 1 minute of exercise and remained elevated for the duration of the 20-minute session. In contrast, the CMRO 2 numerically had increased insignificantly in left M1 and supplementary motor area at 1 minute, but had declined significantly at 10 minutes, returning to baseline at 20 minutes. As measures of CMR glc are impossible during short-term activations, we used measurements of CBF as indices of CMR glc. The decline of CMRO 2 at 10 minutes paralleled a calculated decrease of OGI at this time. The implied generation of lactate in the tissue suggested an important hypothetical role of the metabolite as regulator of CBF during activation. © 2012 ISCBFM All rights reserved.

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Vafaee, M. S., Vang, K., Bergersen, L. H., & Gjedde, A. (2012). Oxygen consumption and blood flow coupling in human motor cortex during intense finger tapping: Implication for a role of lactate. Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism, 32(10), 1859–1868. https://doi.org/10.1038/jcbfm.2012.89

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