THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE RHEOENCEPHALOGRAM AND CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW

STEVEN HUNT GRAHAM, The University of Texas Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences at Houston

Abstract

The rheoencephalogram (REG) is the change in the electrical impedance of the head that occurs with each heart beat. Without knowledge of the relationship between cerebral blood flow (Q) and the REG, the utility of the REG in the study of the cerebral vasculature is greatly limited. The hypothesis is that the relationship between the REG and Q when venous outflow is nonpulsatile is (DIAGRAM, TABLE OR GRAPHIC OMITTED...PLEASE SEE DAI) where K is a proportionality constant and Q is the mean Q. Pulsatile CBF was measured in the goat via a chronically implanted electromagnetic flowmeter. Electrodes were implanted in the ipsilateral cerebral hemisphere, and the REG was measured with a two electrode impedance plethysmograph. Measurements were made with the animal's head elevated so that venous flow pulsations were not transmitted from the heart to the cerebral veins. Measurements were made under conditions of varied cerebrovascular resistance induced by altering blood CO(,2) levels and under conditions of high and low cerebrospinal fluid pressures. There was a high correlation (r = .922-.983) between the REG calculated from the hypothesized relationship and the measured REG under all conditions. Other investigators have proposed that the REG results from linear changes in blood resistivity proportional to blood velocity. There was little to no correlation between the measured REG and the flow velocity ( r = .022-.306). A linear combination of the flow velocity and the hypothesized relationship between the REG and Q did not predict the measured REG significantly better than the hypothesized relationship alone in 37 out of 50 experiments. Jacquy proposed an index (F) of cerebral blood flow calculated from amplitudes and latencies of the REG. The F index was highly correlated (r = .929) with measured cerebral blood flow under control and hypercapnic conditions, but was not as highly correlated under conditions of hypocapnia (r = .723) and arterial hypotension (r = .681). The results demonstrate that the REG is not determined by mean cerebral blood flow, but by the pulsatile flow only. Thus, the utility of the REG in the determination of mean cerebral blood flow is limited.

Subject Area

Anatomy & physiology|Animals

Recommended Citation

GRAHAM, STEVEN HUNT, "THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE RHEOENCEPHALOGRAM AND CEREBRAL BLOOD FLOW" (1982). Texas Medical Center Dissertations (via ProQuest). AAI8223346.
https://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/dissertations/AAI8223346

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