2013
DOI: 10.1139/apnm-2012-0143
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Augmentation of the exercise pressor reflex in prehypertension: roles of the muscle metaboreflex and mechanoreflex

Abstract: This study investigated the hemodynamic mechanisms underlying the exaggerated blood pressure response to muscle contraction in prehypertensive humans and the potential role of skeletal muscle metabo- and mechanoreceptors in this response. To accomplish this, changes in peak mean arterial blood pressure (ΔMAP), cardiac output, and total peripheral resistance (ΔTPR) were compared between prehypertensive (n = 23) and normotensive (n = 19) male subjects during 2 min of static contraction (at 50% of maximal tension… Show more

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Cited by 48 publications
(45 citation statements)
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References 30 publications
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“…Farquhar and colleagues (20,25) recently demonstrated in elderly hypertensive humans that the pressor response to static handgrip exercise (30 -40% MVC) is exaggerated in HTN and sustained during PEMI. Similar findings have been reported in prehypertensive humans performing static handgrip exercise (11,31). However, in a previous study from Farquhar and colleagues (53), the pressor response to rhythmic handgrip exercise (60% MVC) was not exaggerated in HTN, yet MAP was sustained during PEMI.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 87%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Farquhar and colleagues (20,25) recently demonstrated in elderly hypertensive humans that the pressor response to static handgrip exercise (30 -40% MVC) is exaggerated in HTN and sustained during PEMI. Similar findings have been reported in prehypertensive humans performing static handgrip exercise (11,31). However, in a previous study from Farquhar and colleagues (53), the pressor response to rhythmic handgrip exercise (60% MVC) was not exaggerated in HTN, yet MAP was sustained during PEMI.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 87%
“…Recently, we reported that metaboreflex-induced increases cardiac function and arterial pressure are markedly attenuated in HTN when the reflex is activated during dynamic exercise (51). In contrast, several investigators have concluded that the metaboreflex is exaggerated in prehypertension and HTN in both humans (11,20,25,31) and spontaneously hypertensive rats (34,41,59). In the present study, metaboreflex-induced CO and HR responses were markedly attenuated, and the mechanisms sustaining the pressor response during PEMI were altered as CO and HR fell to normal recovery levels.…”
Section: Perspectives and Significancementioning
confidence: 95%
“…Patients with hypertension were shown to produce exaggerated BP elevation and enhanced muscle sympathetic nerve activation during isometric handgrip exercise compared with age-related healthy controls [23,24]. Increased muscle metaboreflex activation leading to augmented pressor responses was demonstrated in older moderately hypertensive adults [25] and in pre-hypertensive state [26]. The exercise pressor reflex might occur promptly: BP elevation and heart rate increased within 30-60 sec during static contraction in an experimental study [27].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…In this case, the blood pressure response is achieved mainly by a SVR-mediated mechanism rather than by a flow-mediated mechanism (11,42). This scenario has been proposed especially for heart failure, and hypertension and it has been ascribed to excessive sympathetic activation with exaggerated vasoconstriction (7,11,16,22,46,47), although this is not a universal finding (37,50). Results of the present investigation suggest that a similar phenomenon occurs during the metaboreflex in subjects with OMS, with a functional shift from a flow-mediated mechanism to a vasoconstrict-mediated mechanism through which the target blood pressure level is reached.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This response is achieved as the result of an elevation in sympathetic tone, which produces arteriolar constriction and enhancement in myocardial performance and in cardiac preload (18,35,39). Differently, in several cardiovascular diseases, such as chronic heart failure and hypertension, although not universally reported (37,50), it has been demonstrated that excessive sympathetic activity can occur during the metaboreflex (7,11,16,41,42). This fact leads to detrimental effects, such as elevated SVR, which in turn causes excessive vasoconstriction and elevated blood pressure (46,47).…”
Section: The Main New Finding Of the Present Investigation Is That Obmentioning
confidence: 99%