TY - JOUR
T1 - Acute hypoxia impairs posterior cerebral bioenergetics and memory in man
AU - Ando, Soichi
AU - Tsukamoto, Hayato
AU - Stacey, Benjamin
AU - Washio, Takuro
AU - Owens, Tom
AU - Calverley, Thomas A.
AU - Fall, Lewis
AU - Marley, Christopher
AU - Iannetelli, Angelo
AU - Hashimoto, Takeshi
AU - Ogoh, Shigehiko
AU - Bailey, Damian
PY - 2023/11/13
Y1 - 2023/11/13
N2 - Hypoxia has the potential to impair cognitive function, however, it is still controversial which cognitive domains are adversely affected. The present study examined the effects of acute hypoxia (~7 hours) on central executive (Go/No-Go) and non-executive (memory) tasks, and to what extent impairment was potentially related to regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) and oxygen delivery (CDO2). Twelve male participants performed cognitive tasks following 0 h, 2 h, 4 h, and 6 h passive exposure to both normoxia and hypoxia (12% O2), in a randomized block cross-over single-blinded design. Middle cerebral artery (MCA) and posterior cerebral artery (PCA) blood velocities and corresponding CDO2 were determined using bi-lateral transcranial Doppler ultrasound. In hypoxia, MCA DO2 was reduced during the Go/No-Go task (p = 0.010, vs. normoxia, main effect), and PCA DO2 attenuated during memorisation (p = 0.005, vs. normoxia) and recall components (p = 0.002, vs. normoxia) in the memory task. The accuracy of the memory task was also impaired in hypoxia (p = 0.049, vs. normoxia). In contrast, hypoxia failed to alter reaction time (p = 0.19, vs. normoxia) or accuracy (p = 0.20, vs. normoxia) during the Go/No-Go task, indicating that selective attention and response inhibition were preserved. Hypoxia did not affect CBF or corresponding CDO2 responses to cognitive activity (p > 0.05, vs. normoxia). Collectively, these findings highlight the differential sensitivity of cognitive domains with memory selectively vulnerable in hypoxia.
AB - Hypoxia has the potential to impair cognitive function, however, it is still controversial which cognitive domains are adversely affected. The present study examined the effects of acute hypoxia (~7 hours) on central executive (Go/No-Go) and non-executive (memory) tasks, and to what extent impairment was potentially related to regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) and oxygen delivery (CDO2). Twelve male participants performed cognitive tasks following 0 h, 2 h, 4 h, and 6 h passive exposure to both normoxia and hypoxia (12% O2), in a randomized block cross-over single-blinded design. Middle cerebral artery (MCA) and posterior cerebral artery (PCA) blood velocities and corresponding CDO2 were determined using bi-lateral transcranial Doppler ultrasound. In hypoxia, MCA DO2 was reduced during the Go/No-Go task (p = 0.010, vs. normoxia, main effect), and PCA DO2 attenuated during memorisation (p = 0.005, vs. normoxia) and recall components (p = 0.002, vs. normoxia) in the memory task. The accuracy of the memory task was also impaired in hypoxia (p = 0.049, vs. normoxia). In contrast, hypoxia failed to alter reaction time (p = 0.19, vs. normoxia) or accuracy (p = 0.20, vs. normoxia) during the Go/No-Go task, indicating that selective attention and response inhibition were preserved. Hypoxia did not affect CBF or corresponding CDO2 responses to cognitive activity (p > 0.05, vs. normoxia). Collectively, these findings highlight the differential sensitivity of cognitive domains with memory selectively vulnerable in hypoxia.
KW - executive function
KW - memory
KW - oxygen delivery
KW - Cerebral blood flow
KW - Cerebral oxygenation
U2 - 10.1113/EP091245
DO - 10.1113/EP091245
M3 - Article
C2 - 37898979
SN - 0958-0670
VL - 108
SP - 1516
EP - 1530
JO - Experimental Physiology
JF - Experimental Physiology
IS - 12
M1 - EP091245
ER -