1. Menstrual cycle and oral contraceptives influence cerebrovascular dynamics during hypercapnia
- Author
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Tania J. Pereira, Sara Wasef, Ilana Ivry, Elnaz Assadpour, Baithat O. Adeyinka, and Heather Edgell
- Subjects
brain blood velocity ,cerebral autoregulation ,hypercapnia ,oral contraceptives ,transcranial doppler ,Physiology ,QP1-981 - Abstract
Abstract Women experience fluctuating orthostatic intolerance during the menstrual cycle, suggesting sex hormones may influence cerebral blood flow. Young (aged 18–30) healthy women, either taking oral contraceptives (OC; n = 14) or not taking OC (NOC; n = 12), were administered hypercapnic gas (5%) for 5 min in the low hormone (LH; placebo pill) and high hormone (HH; active pill) menstrual phases. Hemodynamic and cerebrovascular variables were continuously measured. Cerebral blood velocity changes were monitored using transcranial doppler ultrasound of the middle cerebral artery to determine cerebrovascular reactivity. Cerebral autoregulation was assessed using steady‐state analysis (static cerebral autoregulation) and transfer function analysis (dynamic cerebral autoregulation; dCA). In response to hypercapnia, menstrual phase did not influence static cardiovascular or cerebrovascular responses (all p > 0.07); however, OC users had a greater increase of mean middle cerebral artery blood velocity compared to NOC (NOC‐LH 12 ± 6 cm/s vs. NOC‐HH 16 ± 9 cm/s; OC‐LH 18 ± 5 cm/s vs. OC‐HH 17 ± 11 cm/s; p = 0.048). In all women, hypercapnia improved high frequency (HF) and very low frequency (VLF) cerebral autoregulation (decreased nGain; p = 0.002 and
- Published
- 2022
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