Effects of aging on the cerebrovascular orthostatic response

Yu-Sok Kim, Lysander W. J. Bogert, Rogier V. Immink, Mark P. M. Harms, Willy N. J. M. Colier, Johannes J. van Lieshout*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    24 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    When healthy subjects stand up, it is associated with a reduction in cerebral blood velocity and oxygenation although cerebral autoregulation would be considered to prevent a decrease in cerebral perfusion. Aging is associated with a higher incidence of falls, and in the elderly falls may occur particularly during the adaptation to postural change. This study evaluated the cerebrovascular adaptation to postural change in 15 healthy younger (YNG) vs. 15 older (OLD) subjects by recordings of the near-infrared spectroscopy-determined cerebral oxygenation (cO(2)Hb) and the transcranial Doppler-determined mean middle cerebral artery blood velocity (MCA V-mean). In OLD (59 (52-65) years) vs. can, YNG (29 (27-33) years), the initial postural decline in mean arterial pressure (-52+/-3% vs. -67+/-3%), cO(2)Hb (-3.4+/-2.5 mu mol l(-1) vs. -5.3+/-1.7 mu mol l(-1)) and MCA V-mean (-16+/-4% vs. -29+/-3%) was smaller. The decline in MCA V-mean was related to the reduction in MAP. During prolonged orthostatic stress, the decline in MCA V-mean,and cO(2)Hb in OLD remained smaller. We conclude that with healthy aging the postural reduction in cerebral perfusion becomes less prominent. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)344-353
    Number of pages10
    JournalNeurobiology of Aging
    Volume32
    Issue number2
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Feb-2011

    Keywords

    • Aging
    • Cerebral circulation
    • Hemodynamics
    • Near-infrared spectroscopy
    • Transcranial Doppler
    • Orthostasis
    • Oxygenation
    • DYNAMIC CEREBRAL AUTOREGULATION
    • ARTERY BLOOD VELOCITY
    • FLOW-VELOCITY
    • BRAIN OXYGENATION
    • ELDERLY PEOPLE
    • RISK-FACTORS
    • HUMANS
    • FALLS
    • PRESSURE
    • EXERCISE

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