Experimental Physiology (Dec 2023)

Cerebral blood flow and cerebrovascular reactivity are modified by maturational stage and exercise training status during youth

  • Jack S. Talbot,
  • Dean R. Perkins,
  • Christine M. Tallon,
  • Tony G. Dawkins,
  • Andrew J. M. Douglas,
  • Ryan Beckerleg,
  • Andrew Crofts,
  • Melissa E. Wright,
  • Saajan Davies,
  • Jessica J. Steventon,
  • Kevin Murphy,
  • Rachel N. Lord,
  • Christopher J. A. Pugh,
  • Jon L. Oliver,
  • Rhodri S. Lloyd,
  • Philip N. Ainslie,
  • Ali M. McManus,
  • Mike Stembridge

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1113/EP091279
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 108, no. 12
pp. 1500 – 1515

Abstract

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Abstract Global cerebral blood flow (gCBF) and cerebrovascular reactivity to hypercapnia (CVRCO2) are modulated by gonadal hormone activity, while insulin‐like growth factor 1 facilitates exercise‐mediated cerebral angiogenesis in adults. Whether critical periods of heightened hormonal and neural development during puberty represent an opportunity to further enhance gCBF and CVRCO2 is currently unknown. Therefore, we used duplex ultrasound to assess gCBF and CVRCO2 in n = 128 adolescents characterised as endurance‐exercise trained (males: n = 30, females: n = 36) or untrained (males: n = 29, females: n = 33). Participants were further categorised as pre‐ (males: n = 35, females: n = 33) or post‐ (males: n = 24, females: n = 36) peak height velocity (PHV) to determine pubertal or ‘maturity’ status. Three‐factor ANOVA was used to identify main and interaction effects of maturity status, biological sex and training status on gCBF and CVRCO2. Data are reported as group means (SD). Pre‐PHV youth demonstrated elevated gCBF and slower CVRCO2 mean response times than post‐PHV counterparts (both: P ≤ 0.001). gCBF was only elevated in post‐PHV trained males when compared to untrained counterparts (634 (43) vs. 578 (46) ml min−1; P = 0.007). However, CVRCO2 mean response time was faster in pre‐ (72 (20) vs. 95 (29) s; P ≤ 0.001), but not post‐PHV (P = 0.721) trained youth when compared to untrained counterparts. Cardiorespiratory fitness was associated with gCBF in post‐PHV youth (r2 = 0.19; P ≤ 0.001) and CVRCO2 mean response time in pre‐PHV youth (r2 = 0.13; P = 0.014). Higher cardiorespiratory fitness during adolescence can elevate gCBF while exercise training during childhood primes the development of cerebrovascular function, highlighting the importance of exercise training during the early stages of life in shaping the cerebrovascular phenotype.

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