Hypoxia alters posterior cingulate cortex metabolism during a memory task: a 1H fMRS study

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Hypoxia alters posterior cingulate cortex metabolism during a memory task: a 1H fMRS study. / Rogan, Matthew; Friend, Alex; Rossetti, Gabriella M. K. et al.
In: Neuroimage, Vol. 260, 119397, 15.10.2022.

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Rogan M, Friend A, Rossetti GMK, Edden RAE, Mikkelsen M, Oliver S, Macdonald J, Mullins P. 2022. Hypoxia alters posterior cingulate cortex metabolism during a memory task: a 1H fMRS study. Neuroimage. 260:Article 119397.

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Rogan M, Friend A, Rossetti GMK, Edden RAE, Mikkelsen M, Oliver S et al. Hypoxia alters posterior cingulate cortex metabolism during a memory task: a 1H fMRS study. Neuroimage. 2022 Oct 15;260:119397. Epub 2022 Jun 23.

Author

Rogan, Matthew ; Friend, Alex ; Rossetti, Gabriella M. K. et al. / Hypoxia alters posterior cingulate cortex metabolism during a memory task: a 1H fMRS study. In: Neuroimage. 2022 ; Vol. 260.

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Hypoxia alters posterior cingulate cortex metabolism during a memory task: a 1H fMRS study

AU - Rogan, Matthew

AU - Friend, Alex

AU - Rossetti, Gabriella M. K.

AU - Edden, Richard A E

AU - Mikkelsen, Mark

AU - Oliver, Sam

AU - Macdonald, Jamie

AU - Mullins, Paul

PY - 2022/10/15

Y1 - 2022/10/15

N2 - Environmental hypoxia (fraction of inspired oxygen (FIO2) ∼ 0.120) is known to trigger a global increase in cerebral blood flow (CBF). However, regionally, a heterogeneous response is reported, particularly within the posterior cingulate cortex (PCC) where decreased CBF is found after two hours of hypoxic exposure. Furthermore, hypoxia reverses task-evoked BOLD signals within the PCC, and other regions of the default mode network, suggesting a reversal of neurovascular coupling. An alternative explanation is that the neural architecture supporting cognitive tasks is reorganised. Therefore, to confirm if this previous result is neural or vascular in origin, a measure of neural activity that is not haemodynamic-dependant is required.To achieve this, we utilised functional magnetic resonance spectroscopy to probe the glutamate response to memory recall in the PCC during normoxia (FIO2 = 0.209) and after two hours of poikilocapnic hypoxia (FIO2 = 0.120). We also acquired ASL-based measures of CBF to confirm previous findings of reduced CBF within the PCC in hypoxia.Consistent with previous findings, hypoxia induced a reduction in CBF within the PCC and other regions of the default mode network. Under normoxic conditions, memory recall was associated with an 8% increase in PCC glutamate compared to rest (P = 0.019); a change which was not observed during hypoxia. However, exploratory analysis of other neurometabolites showed that PCC glucose was reduced during hypoxia compared to normoxia both at rest (P = 0.039) and during the task (P = 0.046).We conclude that hypoxia alters the activity-induced increase in glutamate, which may reflect a reduction in oxidative metabolism within the PCC. The reduction in glucose in hypoxia reflects continued metabolism, presumably by non-oxidative means, without replacement of glucose due to reduced CBF.

AB - Environmental hypoxia (fraction of inspired oxygen (FIO2) ∼ 0.120) is known to trigger a global increase in cerebral blood flow (CBF). However, regionally, a heterogeneous response is reported, particularly within the posterior cingulate cortex (PCC) where decreased CBF is found after two hours of hypoxic exposure. Furthermore, hypoxia reverses task-evoked BOLD signals within the PCC, and other regions of the default mode network, suggesting a reversal of neurovascular coupling. An alternative explanation is that the neural architecture supporting cognitive tasks is reorganised. Therefore, to confirm if this previous result is neural or vascular in origin, a measure of neural activity that is not haemodynamic-dependant is required.To achieve this, we utilised functional magnetic resonance spectroscopy to probe the glutamate response to memory recall in the PCC during normoxia (FIO2 = 0.209) and after two hours of poikilocapnic hypoxia (FIO2 = 0.120). We also acquired ASL-based measures of CBF to confirm previous findings of reduced CBF within the PCC in hypoxia.Consistent with previous findings, hypoxia induced a reduction in CBF within the PCC and other regions of the default mode network. Under normoxic conditions, memory recall was associated with an 8% increase in PCC glutamate compared to rest (P = 0.019); a change which was not observed during hypoxia. However, exploratory analysis of other neurometabolites showed that PCC glucose was reduced during hypoxia compared to normoxia both at rest (P = 0.039) and during the task (P = 0.046).We conclude that hypoxia alters the activity-induced increase in glutamate, which may reflect a reduction in oxidative metabolism within the PCC. The reduction in glucose in hypoxia reflects continued metabolism, presumably by non-oxidative means, without replacement of glucose due to reduced CBF.

KW - Hypoxia

KW - Cerebral blood flow

KW - Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy

KW - Posterior Cingulate cortex

M3 - Article

VL - 260

JO - Neuroimage

JF - Neuroimage

SN - 1053-8119

M1 - 119397

ER -