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Neurovascular phase coherence is altered in Alzheimer’s disease

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Neurovascular phase coherence is altered in Alzheimer’s disease. / Bjerkan, Juliane; Meglič, Bernard; Lancaster, Gemma et al.
In: Brain Communications, Vol. 7, No. 1, fcaf007, 28.02.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Bjerkan J, Meglič B, Lancaster G, Kobal J, McClintock PVE, Crawford TJ et al. Neurovascular phase coherence is altered in Alzheimer’s disease. Brain Communications. 2025 Feb 28;7(1):fcaf007. Epub 2025 Feb 3. doi: 10.1093/braincomms/fcaf007

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Bjerkan, Juliane ; Meglič, Bernard ; Lancaster, Gemma et al. / Neurovascular phase coherence is altered in Alzheimer’s disease. In: Brain Communications. 2025 ; Vol. 7, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{37af8cd84df449afbcf78ecffa11243c,
title = "Neurovascular phase coherence is altered in Alzheimer{\textquoteright}s disease",
abstract = "Alzheimer{\textquoteright}s disease is the commonest form of dementia, but its cause still remains elusive. It is characterized by neurodegeneration, with amyloid-beta and tau aggregation. Recently, however, the roles of the vasculature and the neurovascular unit are being highlighted as important for disease progression. In particular, there is reduced microvascular density, and altered gene expression in vascular and glial cells. Structural changes naturally impact the functioning of the neurovascular unit, and the goal of the study was to quantify the corresponding changes in vivo, non-invasively. Our assessment is based on recordings of brain oxygenation, neuronal and cardiorespiratory activities, captured by functional near-infrared spectroscopy, electroencephalogram, electrocardiogram and respiration effort, respectively. Two groups were compared: an Alzheimer{\textquoteright}s disease group (N = 19) and a control group (N = 20) of similar age. The time-series were analysed using methods that can capture multi-scale and time-varying oscillations such as the wavelet transform power and wavelet phase coherence. The Alzheimer{\textquoteright}s disease group shows a significant decrease in the power of brain oxygenation oscillations compared to the control group. There is also a significant global reduction in the phase coherence between brain oxygenation time-series. The neurovascular phase coherence around 0.1 Hz is also significantly reduced in the Alzheimer{\textquoteright}s disease group. In addition, the average respiration rate is increased in the Alzheimer{\textquoteright}s disease group compared to the control group. We show that the phase coherence between vascular and neuronal activities is reduced in Alzheimer{\textquoteright}s disease compared to the control group, indicating altered functioning of the neurovascular unit. The brain oxygenation dynamics reveals reduced power and coordination of oscillations, especially in frequency ranges that are associated with vasomotion. This could lead to reduced oxygen delivery to the brain, which could affect ATP production, and potentially reduce amyloid-beta clearance. These changes in neurovascular dynamics have potential for early diagnosis, as a marker of disease progression, and for evaluating the effect of interventions.",
keywords = "multi-scale oscillatory analysis, time-frequency analysis, phase coherence, brain oxygenation, neurovascular unit",
author = "Juliane Bjerkan and Bernard Megli{\v c} and Gemma Lancaster and Jan Kobal and McClintock, {Peter V E} and Crawford, {Trevor J} and Aneta Stefanovska",
year = "2025",
month = feb,
day = "28",
doi = "10.1093/braincomms/fcaf007",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
journal = "Brain Communications",
issn = "2632-1297",
publisher = "24150509",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Neurovascular phase coherence is altered in Alzheimer’s disease

AU - Bjerkan, Juliane

AU - Meglič, Bernard

AU - Lancaster, Gemma

AU - Kobal, Jan

AU - McClintock, Peter V E

AU - Crawford, Trevor J

AU - Stefanovska, Aneta

PY - 2025/2/28

Y1 - 2025/2/28

N2 - Alzheimer’s disease is the commonest form of dementia, but its cause still remains elusive. It is characterized by neurodegeneration, with amyloid-beta and tau aggregation. Recently, however, the roles of the vasculature and the neurovascular unit are being highlighted as important for disease progression. In particular, there is reduced microvascular density, and altered gene expression in vascular and glial cells. Structural changes naturally impact the functioning of the neurovascular unit, and the goal of the study was to quantify the corresponding changes in vivo, non-invasively. Our assessment is based on recordings of brain oxygenation, neuronal and cardiorespiratory activities, captured by functional near-infrared spectroscopy, electroencephalogram, electrocardiogram and respiration effort, respectively. Two groups were compared: an Alzheimer’s disease group (N = 19) and a control group (N = 20) of similar age. The time-series were analysed using methods that can capture multi-scale and time-varying oscillations such as the wavelet transform power and wavelet phase coherence. The Alzheimer’s disease group shows a significant decrease in the power of brain oxygenation oscillations compared to the control group. There is also a significant global reduction in the phase coherence between brain oxygenation time-series. The neurovascular phase coherence around 0.1 Hz is also significantly reduced in the Alzheimer’s disease group. In addition, the average respiration rate is increased in the Alzheimer’s disease group compared to the control group. We show that the phase coherence between vascular and neuronal activities is reduced in Alzheimer’s disease compared to the control group, indicating altered functioning of the neurovascular unit. The brain oxygenation dynamics reveals reduced power and coordination of oscillations, especially in frequency ranges that are associated with vasomotion. This could lead to reduced oxygen delivery to the brain, which could affect ATP production, and potentially reduce amyloid-beta clearance. These changes in neurovascular dynamics have potential for early diagnosis, as a marker of disease progression, and for evaluating the effect of interventions.

AB - Alzheimer’s disease is the commonest form of dementia, but its cause still remains elusive. It is characterized by neurodegeneration, with amyloid-beta and tau aggregation. Recently, however, the roles of the vasculature and the neurovascular unit are being highlighted as important for disease progression. In particular, there is reduced microvascular density, and altered gene expression in vascular and glial cells. Structural changes naturally impact the functioning of the neurovascular unit, and the goal of the study was to quantify the corresponding changes in vivo, non-invasively. Our assessment is based on recordings of brain oxygenation, neuronal and cardiorespiratory activities, captured by functional near-infrared spectroscopy, electroencephalogram, electrocardiogram and respiration effort, respectively. Two groups were compared: an Alzheimer’s disease group (N = 19) and a control group (N = 20) of similar age. The time-series were analysed using methods that can capture multi-scale and time-varying oscillations such as the wavelet transform power and wavelet phase coherence. The Alzheimer’s disease group shows a significant decrease in the power of brain oxygenation oscillations compared to the control group. There is also a significant global reduction in the phase coherence between brain oxygenation time-series. The neurovascular phase coherence around 0.1 Hz is also significantly reduced in the Alzheimer’s disease group. In addition, the average respiration rate is increased in the Alzheimer’s disease group compared to the control group. We show that the phase coherence between vascular and neuronal activities is reduced in Alzheimer’s disease compared to the control group, indicating altered functioning of the neurovascular unit. The brain oxygenation dynamics reveals reduced power and coordination of oscillations, especially in frequency ranges that are associated with vasomotion. This could lead to reduced oxygen delivery to the brain, which could affect ATP production, and potentially reduce amyloid-beta clearance. These changes in neurovascular dynamics have potential for early diagnosis, as a marker of disease progression, and for evaluating the effect of interventions.

KW - multi-scale oscillatory analysis

KW - time-frequency analysis

KW - phase coherence

KW - brain oxygenation

KW - neurovascular unit

U2 - 10.1093/braincomms/fcaf007

DO - 10.1093/braincomms/fcaf007

M3 - Journal article

VL - 7

JO - Brain Communications

JF - Brain Communications

SN - 2632-1297

IS - 1

M1 - fcaf007

ER -