Altered resting cerebral blood flow (CBF 0 ) in the acute phase post-concussion may contribute to neurobehavioral deficiencies, often reported weeks after the injury. However, in addition to changes in… Click to show full abstract
Altered resting cerebral blood flow (CBF 0 ) in the acute phase post-concussion may contribute to neurobehavioral deficiencies, often reported weeks after the injury. However, in addition to changes in CBF 0 , little is known about other physiological mechanisms that may be disturbed within the cerebrovasculature. The aim of this study was to assess whether changes in baseline perfusion following sport-related concussion (SRC) were co-localized with changes in cerebral metabolic demand. Forty-two subjects (15 SRC patients 8.0 ± 4.6 days post-injury and 27 age-matched healthy control athletes) were studied cross-sectionally. CBF 0 , cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR), resting oxygen extraction (OEF 0 ) and cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen consumption (CMRO 2|0 ) were measured using a combination of hypercapnic and hyperoxic breathing protocols, and the biophysical model developed in calibrated MRI. Blood oxygenation level dependent and perfusion data were acquired simultaneously using a dual-echo arterial spin labelling sequence. SRC patients showed significant decreases in CBF 0 spread across the grey-matter ( P < 0.05, corrected), and these differences were also confounded by the effects of baseline end-tidal CO 2 ( P < 0.0001). Lower perfusion was co-localized with reductions in regional CMRO 2|0 ( P = 0.006) post-SRC, despite finding no group-differences in OEF 0 ( P = 0.800). Higher CVR within voxels showing differences in CBF was also observed in the SRC group ( P = 0.001), compared to controls. Reductions in metabolic demand despite no significant changes in OEF 0 suggests that hypoperfusion post-SRC may reflect compromised metabolic function after the injury. These results provide novel insight about the possible pathophysiological mechanisms underlying concussion that may affect the clinical recovery of athletes after sport-related head injuries.
               
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