Human cardiovascular function can be characterized by steady-state measures of muscle sympathetic nerve activity, arterial pressure, R-R intervals and respiration. Additional information can be obtained from the study of the oscillations of these parameters, as they exist individually, and in relation to each other. The magnitude of oscillations can be gauged with frequency domain methods, including fast Fourier transformation and autoregressive modelling, and the coherence between these measures and their phase relations can be gauged with cross-spectral analysis. We closely examined haemodynamic and autonomic neural periodicities in a group of healthy young volunteers in order Journal of Physiology (1999) 1. We examined interactions between haemodynamic and autonomic neural oscillations during passive upright tilt, to gain better insight into human autonomic regulatory mechanisms. 2. We recorded the electrocardiogram, finger photoplethysmographic arterial pressure, respiration and peroneal nerve muscle sympathetic activity in nine healthy young adults. Subjects breathed in time with a metronome at 12 breaths min¢ (0·2 Hz) for 5 min each, in supine, and 20, 40, 60, 70 and 80 deg head-up positions. We performed fast Fourier transform (and autoregressive) power spectral analyses and integrated low-frequency (0·05-0·15 Hz) and respiratory-frequency (0·15-0·5 Hz) spectral powers. 3. Integrated areas of muscle sympathetic bursts and their low-and respiratory-frequency spectral powers increased directly and significantly with the tilt angle. The centre frequency of low-frequency sympathetic oscillations was constant before and during tilt. Sympathetic bursts occurred more commonly during expiration than inspiration at low tilt angles, but occurred equally in expiration and inspiration at high tilt angles. 4. Systolic and diastolic pressures and their low-and respiratory-frequency spectral powers increased, and R-R intervals and their respiratory-frequency spectral power decreased progressively with the tilt angle. Low-frequency R-R interval spectral power did not change. 5. The cross-spectral phase angle between systolic pressures and R-R intervals remained constant and consistently negative at the low frequency, but shifted progressively from positive to negative at the respiratory frequency during tilt. The arterial baroreflex modulus, calculated from low-frequency cross-spectra, decreased at high tilt angles. 6. Our results document changes of baroreflex responses during upright tilt, which may reflect leftward movement of subjects on their arterial pressure sympathetic and vagal response relations. The intensity, but not the centre frequency of low-frequency cardiovascular rhythms, is modulated by the level of arterial baroreceptor input. Tilt reduces respiratory gating of sympathetic and vagal motoneurone responsiveness to stimulatory inputs for different reasons; during tilt, sympathetic stimulation increases to a level that overwhelms the respiratory gate, and vagal stimulation decreases to a level below that ...
Hemorrhage is a leading cause of death in both civilian and battlefield trauma. Survival rates increase when victims requiring immediate intervention are correctly identified in a mass-casualty situation, but methods of prioritizing casualties based on current triage algorithms are severely limited. Development of effective procedures to predict the magnitude of hemorrhage and the likelihood for progression to hemorrhagic shock must necessarily be based on carefully controlled human experimentation, but controlled study of severe hemorrhage in humans is not possible. It may be possible to simulate hemorrhage, as many of the physiological compensations to acute hemorrhage can be mimicked in the laboratory by applying negative pressure to the lower extremities. Lower body negative pressure (LBNP) sequesters blood from the thorax into dependent regions of the pelvis and legs, effectively decreasing central blood volume in a similar fashion as acute hemorrhage. In this review, we compare physiological responses to hemorrhage and LBNP with particular emphasis on cardiovascular compensations that both share in common. Through evaluation of animal and human data, we present evidence that supports the hypothesis that LBNP, and resulting volume sequestration, is an effective technique to study physiological responses and mechanisms associated with acute hemorrhage in humans. Such experiments could lead to clinical algorithms that identify bleeding victims who will likely progress to hemorrhagic shock and require lifesaving intervention(s).
We assessed the convergent validity of commonly applied metrics of cerebral autoregulation (CA) to determine the extent to which the metrics can be used interchangeably. To examine between-subject relationships among low-frequency (LF; 0.07-0.2 Hz) and very-low-frequency (VLF; 0.02-0.07 Hz) transfer function coherence, phase, gain, and normalized gain, we performed retrospective transfer function analysis on spontaneous blood pressure and middle cerebral artery blood velocity recordings from 105 individuals. We characterized the relationships (n ϭ 29) among spontaneous transfer function metrics and the rate of regulation index and autoregulatory index derived from bilateral thigh-cuff deflation tests. In addition, we analyzed data from subjects (n ϭ 29) who underwent a repeated squat-to-stand protocol to determine the relationships between transfer function metrics during forced blood pressure fluctuations. Finally, data from subjects (n ϭ 16) who underwent step changes in end-tidal PCO 2 (PETCO 2 ) were analyzed to determine whether transfer function metrics could reliably track the modulation of CA within individuals. CA metrics were generally unrelated or showed only weak to moderate correlations. Changes in PET CO 2 were positively related to coherence [LF:  ϭ 0.0065 arbitrary units (AU)/mmHg and VLF:  ϭ 0.011 AU/mmHg, both P Ͻ 0.01] and inversely related to phase (LF:  ϭ Ϫ0.026 rad/mmHg and VLF:  ϭ Ϫ0.018 rad/mmHg, both P Ͻ 0.01) and normalized gain (LF:  ϭ Ϫ0.042%/mmHg 2 and VLF:  ϭ Ϫ0.013%/mmHg 2 , both P Ͻ 0.01). However, PETCO 2 was positively associated with gain (LF:  ϭ 0.0070 cm·s
We studied the influence of three types of breathing [spontaneous, frequency controlled (0.25 Hz), and hyperventilation with 100% oxygen] and apnea on R-R interval, photoplethysmographic arterial pressure, and muscle sympathetic rhythms in nine healthy young adults. We integrated fast Fourier transform power spectra over low (0.05-0.15 Hz) and respiratory (0.15-0.3 Hz) frequencies; estimated vagal baroreceptor-cardiac reflex gain at low frequencies with cross-spectral techniques; and used partial coherence analysis to remove the influence of breathing from the R-R interval, systolic pressure, and muscle sympathetic nerve spectra. Coherence among signals varied as functions of both frequency and time. Partialization abolished the coherence among these signals at respiratory but not at low frequencies. The mode of breathing did not influence low-frequency oscillations, and they persisted during apnea. Our study documents the independence of low-frequency rhythms from respiratory activity and suggests that the close correlations that may exist among arterial pressures, R-R intervals, and muscle sympathetic nerve activity at respiratory frequencies result from the influence of respiration on these measures rather than from arterial baroreflex physiology. Most importantly, our results indicate that correlations among autonomic and hemodynamic rhythms vary over time and frequency, and, thus, are facultative rather than fixed.
Orthostatic intolerance is common when astronauts return to Earth: after brief spaceflight, up to two‐thirds are unable to remain standing for 10 min. Previous research suggests that susceptible individuals are unable to increase their systemic vascular resistance and plasma noradrenaline concentrations above pre‐flight upright levels. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that adaptation to the microgravity of space impairs sympathetic neural responses to upright posture on Earth. We studied six astronauts ∼72 and 23 days before and on landing day after the 16 day Neurolab space shuttle mission. We measured heart rate, arterial pressure and cardiac output, and calculated stroke volume and total peripheral resistance, during supine rest and 10 min of 60 deg upright tilt. Muscle sympathetic nerve activity was recorded in five subjects, as a direct measure of sympathetic nervous system responses. As in previous studies, mean (±s.e.m.) stroke volume was lower (46 ± 5 vs. 76 ± 3 ml, P= 0.017) and heart rate was higher (93 ± 1 vs. 74 ± 4 beats min−1, P= 0.002) during tilt after spaceflight than before spaceflight. Total peripheral resistance during tilt post flight was higher in some, but not all astronauts (1674 ± 256 vs. 1372 ± 62 dynes s cm−5, P= 0.32). No crew member exhibited orthostatic hypotension or presyncopal symptoms during the 10 min of postflight tilting. Muscle sympathetic nerve activity was higher post flight in all subjects, in supine (27 ± 4 vs. 17 ± 2 bursts min−1, P= 0.04) and tilted (46 ± 4 vs. 38 ± 3 bursts min−1, P= 0.01) positions. A strong (r2= 0.91–1.00) linear correlation between left ventricular stroke volume and muscle sympathetic nerve activity suggested that sympathetic responses were appropriate for the haemodynamic challenge of upright tilt and were unaffected by spaceflight. We conclude that after 16 days of spaceflight, muscle sympathetic nerve responses to upright tilt are normal.
Taking the BD and mortality measurements together, this analysis shows that a SBP < or =110 mm Hg is a more clinically relevant definition of hypotension and hypoperfusion than is 90 mm Hg. This analysis will also be useful for developing appropriately powered studies of hemorrhagic shock.
The purpose of this study was to determine how breathing protocols requiring varying degrees of control affect cardiovascular dynamics. We measured inspiratory volume, end-tidal CO2, R-R interval, and arterial pressure spectral power in 10 volunteers who followed the following 5 breathing protocols: 1) uncontrolled breathing for 5 min; 2) stepwise frequency breathing (at 0.3, 0.25, 0.2, 0.15, 0.1, and 0.05 Hz for 2 min each); 3) stepwise frequency breathing as above, but with prescribed tidal volumes; 4) random-frequency breathing (∼0.5–0.05 Hz) for 6 min; and 5) fixed-frequency breathing (0.25 Hz) for 5 min. During stepwise breathing, R-R interval and arterial pressure spectral power increased as breathing frequency decreased. Control of inspired volume reduced R-R interval spectral power during 0.1 Hz breathing ( P < 0.05). Stepwise and random-breathing protocols yielded comparable coherence and transfer functions between respiration and R-R intervals and systolic pressure and R-R intervals. Random- and fixed-frequency breathing reduced end-tidal CO2modestly ( P < 0.05). Our data suggest that stringent tidal volume control attenuates low-frequency R-R interval oscillations and that fixed- and random-rate breathing may decrease CO2 chemoreceptor stimulation. We conclude that autonomic rhythms measured during different breathing protocols have much in common but that a stepwise protocol without stringent control of inspired volume may allow for the most efficient assessment of short-term respiratory-mediated autonomic oscillations.
Activation of sympathetic efferent traffic is essential to maintaining adequate arterial pressures during reductions of central blood volume. Sympathetic baroreflex gain may be reduced, and muscle sympathetic firing characteristics altered with head-up tilt just before presyncope in humans. Volume redistributions with lower body negative pressure (LBNP) are similar to those that occur during haemorrhage, but limited data exist describing arterial pressure-muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) relationships during intense LBNP. Responses similar to those that occur in presyncopal subjects during head-up tilt may signal the beginnings of cardiovascular decompensation associated with haemorrhage. We therefore tested the hypotheses that intense LBNP disrupts MSNA firing characteristics and leads to a dissociation between arterial pressure and sympathetic traffic prior to presyncope. In 17 healthy volunteers (12 males and 5 females), we recorded ECG, finger photoplethysmographic arterial pressure and MSNA. Subjects were exposed to 5 min LBNP stages until the onset of presyncope. The LBNP level eliciting presyncope was denoted as 100% tolerance, and then data were assessed relative to this normalised maximal tolerance by expressing LBNP levels as 80, 60, 40, 20 and 0% (baseline) of maximal tolerance. Data were analysed in both time and frequency domains, and cross-spectral analyses were performed to determine the coherence, transfer function and phase angle between diastolic arterial pressure (DAP) and MSNA. DAP-MSNA coherence increased progressively and significantly up to 80% maximal tolerance. Transfer functions were unchanged, but phase angle shifted from positive to negative with application of LBNP. Sympathetic bursts fused in 10 subjects during high levels of LBNP (burst fusing may reflect modulation of central mechanisms, an artefact arising from our use of a 0.1 s time constant for integrating filtered nerve activity, or a combination of both). On average, arterial pressures and MSNA decreased significantly the final 20 s before presyncope (n = 17), but of this group, MSNA increased in seven subjects. No linear relationship was observed between the magnitude of DAP and MSNA changes before presyncope (r = 0.12). We report three primary findings: (1) progressive LBNP (and presumed progressive arterial baroreceptor unloading) increases cross-spectral coherence between arterial pressure and MSNA, but sympathetic baroreflex control is reduced before presyncope; (2) withdrawal of MSNA is not a prerequisite for presyncope despite significant decreases of arterial pressure; and (3) reductions of venous return, probably induced by intense LBNP, disrupt MSNA firing characteristics that manifest as fused integrated bursts before the onset of presyncope. Although fusing of integrated sympathetic bursts may reflect a true physiological compensation to severe reductions of venous return, duplication of this finding utilizing shorter time constants for integration of the nerve signal is required. Abbreviations AP, arteri...
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