Cerebral Blood Flow in Orthostatic Intolerance.

Publication date: Feb 03, 2025

Cerebral blood flow (CBF) is vital for delivering oxygen and nutrients to the brain. Many forms of orthostatic intolerance (OI) involve impaired regulation of CBF in the upright posture, which results in disabling symptoms that decrease quality of life. Because CBF is not easy to measure, rises in heart rate or drops in blood pressure are used as proxies for abnormal CBF. These result in diagnoses such as postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome and orthostatic hypotension. However, in many other OI syndromes such as myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome and long COVID, heart rate and blood pressure are frequently normal despite significant drops in CBF. This often leads to the incorrect conclusion that there is nothing hemodynamically abnormal in these patients and thus no explanation or treatment is needed. There is a need to measure CBF, as orthostatic hypoperfusion is the shared pathophysiology for all forms of OI. In this review, we examine the literature studying CBF dysfunction in various syndromes with OI and evaluate methods of measuring CBF including transcranial Doppler ultrasound, extracranial cerebral blood flow ultrasound, near infrared spectroscopy, and wearable devices.

Concepts Keywords
Extracranial cerebral blood flow
Fatigue long COVID
Hemodynamically ME/CFS
Hypoperfusion orthostatic intolerance
Tachycardia POTS

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease IDO blood
disease MESH Orthostatic Intolerance
drug DRUGBANK Oxygen
disease MESH posture
disease IDO quality
disease MESH postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome
disease MESH orthostatic hypotension
disease MESH syndromes
disease MESH myalgic encephalomyelitis
disease MESH long COVID

Original Article

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