Abstract
We simultaneously measured pial arteriolar diameter and changes in cortical blood flow during activation of the somatosensory cortex by sciatic nerve stimulation. The pial vasculature was visualized with a closed-cranial window technique in chloralose-anesthetized rats (n = 13). Local blood flow was monitored with laser-Doppler flowmetry. During stimulation of the sciatic nerve (0.2 V, 5 Hz, 20 s), vascular diameter and laser-Doppler flow consistently displayed similar response profiles. With 0.5-ms stimulation pulses, the responses showed an initial peak followed by a smaller but sustained plateau dilation. In contrast, 5-ms pulses evoked a monotonically rising response. Our results support the concept that pial arteriolar diameter changes reflect cortical blood flow responses during somatosensory stimulation.
