• Journal of neurotrauma · Apr 2024

    Neurovascular coupling in acutely concussed adolescent patients.

    • Patricia R Roby, Anne E Mozel, Matthew F Grady, Christina L Master, and Kristy B Arbogast.
    • Center for Injury Research and Prevention, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
    • J. Neurotrauma. 2024 Apr 9.

    AbstractNeurovascular coupling (NVC) uniquely describes cerebrovascular response to neural activation and has demonstrated impairments following concussion in adult patients. It is currently unclear how adolescent patients experience impaired NVC acutely following concussion during this dynamic phase of physiological development. The purpose of this study was to investigate NVC in acutely concussed adolescent patients relative to controls. We recruited patients presenting to a sports medicine practice within 28 days of a concussion or a musculoskeletal injury (controls). Transcranial Doppler ultrasound was used to measure changes in patients' posterior cerebral artery (PCA) velocity in response to two progressively challenging visual tasks: (1) reading and (2) visual search. Each task was presented in five 1-min trials (20 sec eyes closed/40 sec eyes open). Resting PCA velocity data were derived by averaging PCA velocity across a 2-min baseline period that preceded the visual tasks. Filtered task data were converted to time-series curves representing 40 consecutive 1-sec averages for each trial. Curves were then averaged across the five trials and time-aligned to stimulus onset (eyes open) to generate a single ensemble-averaged 40-sec curve representing NVC response for each participant for each task. Independent t tests were used to assess group differences (concussion vs. control) in resting PCA velocity. Separate linear mixed-effects models were used to evaluate group differences (concussion vs. control) in NVC response profiles for both visual tasks and group-by-task interaction. Twenty-one concussion patients (female = 8 [38.1%]; age = 14.4 ± 1.9 years) and 20 controls (female = 7 [35.0%]; age = 14.4 ± 1.9 years) were included in our analysis. Average resting PCA velocity did not significantly differ between concussion patients (36.6 ± 8.0 cm/sec) and controls (39.3 ± 8.5 cm/sec) (t39 = 1.06; p = 0.30). There were no significant group differences in relative NVC response curves during the reading task (F1,1560 = 2.23; p = 0.14) or the visual search task (F1,1521 = 2.04; p = 0.15). In contrast, the differential response to task (e.g., increase from reading task to visual search task) was significantly greater in concussion patients than in controls (p < 0.0001). The NVC response to the visual search task was 7.1% higher than the response to reading in concussion patients relative to being 5.5% higher in controls. Our data indicate that concussed patients present with a significantly greater response to more difficult tasks than do controls, suggesting that concussed adolescents require increased neural resource allocation as task difficulty increases. The study provides insight into the neurophysiological consequences of concussion in adolescent patients.

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