Cerebral Oxygen Budgeting: Network-Level BOLD Dynamics During Acute Hypoxia
Discuss this preprint
Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Hypoxia constrains cerebral oxygen availability and challenges brain function and stability. Although hypoxia-responsive functional connectivity (HR-FC) reorganizes rapidly with declining arterial oxygen partial pressure, its relationship to local neurovascular activity remains unclear. We examined time-resolved amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations (ALFF) in blood-oxygenation-level dependent (BOLD) fMRI during graded acute hypoxia in healthy adults, performing a continuous cognitive test (Go/No-go task) with concurrent physiological monitoring. Dynamic ALFF and functional connectivity were estimated using a sliding-window approach and analyzed across large-scale brain networks defined by Schaefer’s 17-network parcellation. Severe hypoxia elicited temporally dissociated responses across modalities. Functional connectivity increased monotonically, whereas ALFF exhibited pronounced nonlinear modulation, including phase-dependent divergence across networks. During hypoxic decompensation, the default mode network (DefaultA) showed marked ALFF suppression, whereas a ventral secondary somatosensory-dominant network (SomMotB) exhibited preferential preservation despite similar engagement in HR-FC. Together, these findings indicate that network-level ALFF captures a distinct yet complementary layer of functional dynamics, with a temporal profile distinct from functional connectivity. Spontaneous BOLD dynamics during acute hypoxia reflect structured network-level modulation rather than a uniform suppression attributable solely to reduced oxygen availability. These findings support a conceptual framework of cerebral oxygen budgeting , in which metabolic constraints reshape functional dynamics across brain networks.