(Stroke. 1999;30:2152-2158.)
© 1999 American Heart Association, Inc.
Original Contributions |
From the Department of Psychiatry and Neuropsychology (G.V., N.S.) and the Center for Cardiac Surgery (N.S.), University Ghent, Ghent, Belgium.
Correspondence and reprint requests to Guy Vingerhoets, Department of Psychiatry and Neuropsychology, University Hospital Ghent, De Pintelaan 185-4K3, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium. E-mail guy.vingerhoets{at}rug.ac.be
Background and PurposeTranscranial Doppler ultrasonography (TCD) permits the assessment of cognitively induced cerebral blood flow velocity (BFV) changes. We sought to investigate the lateralization of BFV acceleration induced by a variety of cognitive tasks and to determine the influence of age, gender, IQ, and quality of the performance on the relative BFV changes.
MethodsSimultaneous bilateral TCD monitoring of BFV in the middle cerebral arteries (MCAs) was performed in 90 normal right-handed volunteers during 13 verbal and visuospatial tasks and their preceding rest periods.
ResultsAll tasks induced a significant bilateral BFV increase in the MCAs compared with the preceding rest periods. Five verbal tasks showed a significant left-hemispheric BFV acceleration. Linguistic tasks that required active or creative processing of the verbal stimuli, such as sentence construction or word fluency, elicited the most asymmetric response. Five visuospatial tasks revealed a significant right-hemispheric BFV shift. Paradigms that combined visuospatial attention and visuomotor manipulation showed the most lateralized acceleration. Older volunteers (aged >50 years) showed higher relative BFV changes, but lateralization was not influenced by age. Gender, IQ, and performance quality did not reveal significant effects on BFV change.
ConclusionsBilateral TCD is a noninvasive technique that has the potential to connect the particular change in flow pattern of the MCA distribution with selective cognitive activity and thus offers specific functional information of scientific and clinical value.
Key Words: blood flow velocity cognition neuropsychological tests ultrasonography, Doppler, transcranial
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