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Pulse wave encephalopathy (PWE) is hypothesised to initiate many forms of dementia, motivating its identification and risk assessment. As candidate pulsatility based biomarkers for PWE, pulsatility index and pulsatility damping have been studied and, currently, do not adequately stratify risk due to variability in pulsatility and spatial bias. Here, we propose a locus-independent pulsatility transmission coefficient computed by spatially tracking pulsatility along vessels to characterise the brain pulse dynamics at a whole-organ level. Our preliminary analyses in a cohort of 20 subjects indicate that this measurement agrees with clinical observations relating blood pulsatility with age, heart rate, and sex, making it a suitable candidate to study the risk of PWE. We identified transmission differences between vascular regions perfused by the basilar and internal carotid arteries attributed to the identified dependence on cerebral blood flow, and some participants presented differences between the internal carotid perfused regions that were not related to flow or pulsatility burden, suggesting underlying mechanical differences. Large populational studies would benefit from retrospective pulsatility transmission analyses, providing a new comprehensive arterial description of the hemodynamic state in the brain. We provide a publicly available implementation of our tools to derive this coefficient, built into pre-existing open-source software.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-63312-4 | DOI Listing |
Cell Mol Life Sci
August 2025
Institute of Mechanobiology and Medical Engineering, School of Life Sciences & Biotechnology, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, China.
Neointimal hyperplasia occurs in the context of vascular injury, such as stent intervention or balloon angioplasty. However, the role of mechanical forces in this process remains to be studied. In this study, a rat carotid artery intimal injury model was established.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
May 2025
Institute of Fundamental Technological Research, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland.
Signaling pathways transmit and process information, enabling cells to respond accurately to external cues. Disease states like cancer can corrupt signal transmission, though the magnitude to which they reduce information capacity has not been quantified. Here we apply pseudo-random pulsatile optogenetic stimulation, live-cell imaging, and information theory to compare the information capacity of receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) signaling pathways in EML4-ALK-driven lung cancer cells (STE-1) and non-transformed lung epithelial cells (BEAS-2B).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnesthesiology
July 2025
Department of Diagnostics and Intervention, Anesthesiology and Intensive Care. Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden. OrcID 0000-0002-0934-4534.
Background: Induced hypertension is used clinically to increase cerebral blood flow (CBF) in conditions such as vasospasm after subarachnoid hemorrhage. However, increased blood pressure also raises pulsatile force. Cerebrovascular compliance plays a key role in buffering flow dynamics and protecting the microcirculation, but whether it adapts to elevated pressure remains unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUltrasound Med Biol
September 2025
Department of Information Engineering, University of Florence, Florence, Italy.
Objective: The assessment of blood-flow volume (BFV) is clinically relevant for the diagnosis and monitoring of cardiovascular dysfunctions and the prevention of subsequent secondary diseases. Non-invasive BFV measurement based on ultrasound methods are appealing for lower cost, real-time operation, and equipment portability. Recently, complex ultrasound research scanners with 1024 channels controlling the elements of a 2-D matrix array probe, have been demonstrated suitable for off-line accurate BFV estimates.
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