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Sunday, February 5, 2012

Cerebral blood flow velocity not involved in POTS neurocognitive impairment

Increasing orthostatic stress impairs neurocognitive functioning in chronic fatigue syndrome with postural tachycardia syndrome.
Ocon AJ, Messer ZR, Medow MS, Stewart JM.

Abstract
CFS (chronic fatigue syndrome) is commonly co-morbid with POTS (postural tachycardia syndrome).

Individuals with CFS/POTS experience unrelenting fatigue, tachycardia during orthostatic stress and ill-defined neurocognitive impairment, often described as 'mental fog'.

We hypothesized that orthostatic stress causes neurocognitive impairment in CFS/POTS related to decreased CBFV (cerebral blood flow velocity).

A total of 16 CFS/POTS and 20 control subjects underwent graded tilt table testing (at 0, 15, 30, 45, 60 and 75°) with continuous cardiovascular, cerebrovascular, and respiratory monitoring and neurocognitive testing using an n-back task at each angle.

The n-back task tests working memory, concentration, attention and information processing.

The n-back task imposes increasing cognitive challenge with escalating (0-, 1-, 2-, 3- and 4-back) difficulty levels.

Subject dropout due to orthostatic presyncope at each angle was similar between groups.

There were no n-back accuracy or RT (reaction time) differences between groups while supine.

CFS/POTS subjects responded less correctly during the n-back task test and had greater nRT (normalized RT) at 45, 60 and 75°.

Furthermore, at 75° CFS/POTS subjects responded less correctly and had greater nRT than controls during the 2-, 3- and 4-back tests.

Changes in CBFV (cerebral blood flow velocity) were not different between the groups and were not associated with n-back task test scores.

Thus we conclude that increasing orthostatic stress combined with a cognitive challenge impairs the neurocognitive abilities of working memory, accuracy and information processing in CFS/POTS, but that this is not related to changes in CBFV.

Individuals with CFS/POTS should be aware that orthostatic stress may impair their neurocognitive abilities.
Alas, the sample size is a bit smallish…

(via ProHealth)

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