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  4. Spontaneous baroreflex control of heart rate versus cardiac output: altered coupling in heart failure.
 
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Spontaneous baroreflex control of heart rate versus cardiac output: altered coupling in heart failure.

Author(s)
ASI Sponsor
Sala-Mercado, Javier A
Ichinose, Masashi
Hammond, Robert L
Subjects

Animal

Animal: physiology

Animals

Baroreflex

Baroreflex: physiolog...

Blood Pressure

Blood Pressure: physi...

Cardiac Output

Cardiac Output: physi...

Data Interpretation

Dogs

Female

Heart

Heart Failure

Heart Failure: physio...

Heart Rate

Heart Rate: physiolog...

Heart Ventricles

Heart: physiopatholog...

Left

Left: physiology

Low

Low: physiopathology

Male

Muscle

Myocardial Contractio...

Myocardial Contractio...

Physical Conditioning...

Regional Blood Flow

Regional Blood Flow: ...

Skeletal

Skeletal: blood suppl...

Skeletal: physiology

Statistical

Stroke Volume

Stroke Volume: physio...

Ventricular Function

Date Issued
2007-03-01
Abstract
In heart failure (HF), there is a reduced baroreflex sensitivity at rest, and during dynamic exercise there is enhanced muscle metaboreflex activation (MRA). However, how the arterial baroreflex modulates HR during exercise is unknown. We tested the hypothesis that spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity (SBRS) is attenuated during exercise in HF and that MRA further depresses SBRS. In seven conscious dogs we measured heart rate (HR), cardiac output, and left ventricular systolic pressure at rest and during mild and moderate dynamic exercise, before and during MRA (via imposed reductions of hindlimb blood flow), and before and after induction of HF (by rapid ventricular pacing). SBRS was assessed by the sequences method. In control, SBRS was reduced from rest with a progressive resetting of the baroreflex stimulus-response relationship in proportion to exercise intensity and magnitude of MRA. In HF, SBRS was significantly depressed in all settings; however, the changes with exercise and MRA occurred with a pattern similar to the control state. As in control, the baroreflex stimulus-response relationship showed an intensity- and muscle metaboreflex (MMR)-dependent rightward and upward shift. The results of this study indicate that HF induces an impairment in baroreflex control of HR at rest and during exercise, although the effects of exercise and MRA on SBRS occur with a similar pattern as in control, indicating the persistence of some vagal activity.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13025/2229
ISSN
0363-6135
Journal
American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology
URL
http://ajpheart.physiology.org/cgi/content/abstract/293/3/H1929
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