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An Analysis of Resting-State Functional Transcranial Doppler Recordings from Middle Cerebral Arteries
Authors
A Lempel
A Porta
+35 more
A Porta
AJB Myrden
AS Salinet
AV Alexandrov
B Rey
B Rey
Dmitry Kalika
E Sejdić
E Sejdić
EM Vriens
Ervin Sejdić
Friedemann Paul
H Lohmann
HB Mann
J Krejza
J Lee
M Aboy
M Deppe
M Marinoni
M Matteis
M Moody
N Stroobant
Nicholas Czarnek
OB Paulson
PJ Martin
R Aaslid
RC Oldfield
RE Kelley
S Duschek
S Duschek
S Knake
S Knecht
S Ogawa
TM Markwalder
WH Kruskal
Publication date
6 February 2013
Publisher
'Public Library of Science (PLoS)'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Functional transcrannial Doppler (fTCD) is used for monitoring the hemodynamics characteristics of major cerebral arteries. Its resting-state characteristics are known only when considering the maximal velocity corresponding to the highest Doppler shift (so called the envelope signals). Significantly more information about the resting-state fTCD can be gained when considering the raw cerebral blood flow velocity (CBFV) recordings. In this paper, we considered simultaneously acquired envelope and raw CBFV signals. Specifically, we collected bilateral CBFV recordings from left and right middle cerebral arteries using 20 healthy subjects (10 females). The data collection lasted for 15 minutes. The subjects were asked to remain awake, stay silent, and try to remain thought-free during the data collection. Time, frequency and time-frequency features were extracted from both the raw and the envelope CBFV signals. The effects of age, sex and body-mass index were examined on the extracted features. The results showed that the raw CBFV signals had a higher frequency content, and its temporal structures were almost uncorrelated. The information-theoretic features showed that the raw recordings from left and right middle cerebral arteries had higher content of mutual information than the envelope signals. Age and body-mass index did not have statistically significant effects on the extracted features. Sex-based differences were observed in all three domains and for both, the envelope signals and the raw CBFV signals. These findings indicate that the raw CBFV signals provide valuable information about the cerebral blood flow which can be utilized in further validation of fTCD as a clinical tool. © 2013 Sejdić et al
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