Continuous reduction in cerebral oxygenation during endurance exercise in patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension

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Abstract

Background: Patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) have lower cerebral blood flow (CBF) and oxygenation compared to healthy sedentary subjects, the latter negatively correlating with exercise capacity during incremental cycling exercise. We hypothesized that patients would also exhibit altered CBF and oxygenation during endurance exercise, which would correlate with endurance time. Methods: Resting and exercise cardiorespiratory parameters, blood velocity in the middle cerebral artery (MCAv; transcranial doppler) and cerebral oxygenation (relative changes in cerebral tissue oxygenation index (ΔcTOI) and cerebral deoxyhemoglobin (ΔcHHb); near-infrared spectroscopy) were continuously monitored in nine PAH patients and 10 healthy-matched controls throughout endurance exercise. Cardiac output (CO), systemic blood pressure (BP) and oxygen saturation (SpO2), ventilatory metrics and end-tidal CO2 pressure (PETCO2) were also assessed noninvasively. Results: Despite a lower workload and endurance oxygen consumption, similar CO and systemic BP, ΔcTOI was lower in PAH patients compared to controls (p

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Malenfant, S., Brassard, P., Paquette, M., Le Blanc, O., Chouinard, A., Bonnet, S., & Provencher, S. (2020). Continuous reduction in cerebral oxygenation during endurance exercise in patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension. Physiological Reports, 8(6). https://doi.org/10.14814/phy2.14389

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