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J Appl Physiol 103: 369-375, 2007. First published April 26, 2007; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00271.2007
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INNOVATIVE METHODOLOGY

Influence of noninvasive peripheral arterial blood pressure measurements on assessment of dynamic cerebral autoregulation

Emily L. Sammons,1,2 Nilesh J. Samani,1 Stephen M. Smith,1 Wendy E. Rathbone,1 Steve Bentley,3 John F. Potter,4 and Ronney B. Panerai1

1Department of Cardiovascular Sciences, 2Faculty of Medicine, University of Leicester; 3Department of Medical Physics, University Hospitals of Leicester, NHS Trust, Leicester; and 4School of Medicine, University of East Anglia, Norwich, United Kingdom

Submitted 8 March 2007 ; accepted in final form 25 April 2007

Assessment of dynamic cerebral autoregulation (CA) requires continuous recording of arterial blood pressure (ABP). In humans, noninvasive ABP recordings with the Finapres device have often been used for this purpose. We compared estimates of dynamic CA derived from Finapres with those from invasive recordings in the aorta. Measurements of finger noninvasive ABP (Finapres), intra-aortic ABP (Millar catheter), surface ECG, transcutaneous CO2, and bilateral cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFV) in the middle cerebral arteries were simultaneously and continuously recorded in 27 patients scheduled for percutaneous coronary interventions. Phase, gain, coherence, and CBFV step response from both the Finapres and intra-arterial catheter were estimated by transfer function analysis. A dynamic autoregulation index (ARI) was also calculated. For both hemispheres, the ARI index and the CBFV step response recovery at 4 s were significantly greater for the Finapres-derived estimates than for the values obtained from aortic pressure. The transfer function gain for frequencies <0.1 Hz was significantly smaller for the Finapres estimates. The phase frequency response was significantly greater for the Finapres estimates at frequencies >0.1 Hz, but not at lower frequencies. The Finapres gives higher values for the efficiency of dynamic CA compared with values derived from aortic pressure measurements, as indicated by biases in the ARI index, CBFV step response, gain, and phase. Despite the significance of these biases, their relatively small amplitude indicates a good level of agreement between indexes of CA derived from the Finapres compared with corresponding estimates obtained from invasive measurements of aortic ABP.

cerebral blood flow velocity; central arterial pressure



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: R. B. Panerai, Dept. of Medical Physics, Leicester Royal Infirmary, Leicester LE1 5WW, UK (e-mail: rp9{at}le.ac.uk)




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