Spontaneous vasomotion in the visual thalamus of cats alters neurovascular coupling, uncoupling neural activity from blood flow during oscillatory periods.
Vasomotion significantly alters neurovascular coupling in the visual thalamus, raising important questions regarding the interpretation of neuroimaging studies that assume a linear relationship between neural activity and blood flow.
p-value: p=<0.05
Spontaneous contraction and relaxation of arteries (and in some instances venules) has been termed vasomotion and has been observed in an extensive variety of tissues and species. However, its functions and underlying mechanisms are still under discussion. We demonstrate that in vivo spectrophotometry, measured simultaneously with extracellular recordings at the same locations in the visual thalamus of the cat, reveals vasomotion, measured as an oscillation (0.14 hz) in the recorded oxyhemoglobin (OxyHb) signal, which appears spontaneously in the microcirculation and can last for periods of hours. During some non-oscillatory periods, maintained sensory stimulation evokes vasomotion lasting ~30s, resembling an adaptive vascular phenomenon. This oscillation in the oxyhaemoblobin signal is sensitive to pharmacological manipulation: it is inducible by chloralose anaesthesia and it can be temporarily blocked by systemic administration of adrenaline or acetylcholine (ACh). During these oscillatory periods, neurovascular coupling (i.e. the relationship between local neural activity and the rate of blood supply to that location) appears significantly altered. This raises important questions with regard to the interpretation of results from studies currently dependent upon a linear relationship between neural activity and blood flow, such as neuroimaging.
Rivadulla et al. (Fri,) conducted a other in Neurovascular coupling (n=17). Pharmacological manipulation (chloralose, adrenaline, acetylcholine) and visual stimulation vs. Baseline/isoflurane anesthesia was evaluated on Increase in OxyHb absorbance evoked by visual stimulation during non-oscillatory periods (p=<0.05). Spontaneous vasomotion in the visual thalamus of cats alters neurovascular coupling, uncoupling neural activity from blood flow during oscillatory periods.