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1.
The present study investigated the effects of long-duration exercise on heart rate variability [as a marker of cardiac vagal tone (VT)]. Heart rate variability (time series analysis) was measured in mongrel dogs (n = 24) with healed myocardial infarctions during 1 h of submaximal exercise (treadmill running at 6.4 km/h at 10% grade). Long-duration exercise provoked a significant (ANOVA, all P < 0.01, means +/- SD) increase in heart rate (1st min, 165.3 +/- 15.6 vs. last min, 197.5 +/- 21.5 beats/min) and significant reductions in high frequency (0.24 to 1.04 Hz) power (VT: 1st min, 3.7 +/- 1.5 vs. last min, 1.0 +/- 0.9 ln ms(2)), R-R interval range (1st min, 107.9 +/- 38.3 vs. last min, 28.8 +/- 13.2 ms), and R-R interval SD (1st min, 24.3 +/- 7.7 vs. last min 6.3 +/- 1.7 ms). Because endurance exercise training can increase cardiac vagal regulation, the studies were repeated after either a 10-wk exercise training (n = 9) or a 10-wk sedentary period (n = 7). After training was completed, long-duration exercise elicited smaller increases in heart rate (pretraining: 1st min, 156.0 +/- 13.8 vs. last min, 189.6 +/- 21.9 beats/min; and posttraining: 1st min, 149.8 +/- 14.6 vs. last min, 172.7 +/- 8.8 beats/min) and smaller reductions in heart rate variability (e.g., VT, pretraining: 1st min, 4.2 +/- 1.7 vs. last min, 0.9 +/- 1.1 ln ms(2); and posttraining: 1st min, 4.8 +/- 1.1 vs. last min, 2.0 +/- 0.6 ln ms(2)). The response to long-duration exercise did not change in the sedentary animals. Thus the heart rate increase that accompanies long-duration exercise results, at least in part, from reductions in cardiac vagal regulation. Furthermore, exercise training attenuated these exercise-induced reductions in heart rate variability, suggesting maintenance of a higher cardiac vagal activity during exercise in the trained state.  相似文献   

2.
The influence of fitness on cardiac vagal activity and baroreflex-mediated control of heart rate has not been clearly established in humans. Therefore, we studied resting cardiac vagal activity by evaluating respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) and examined carotid-cardiac baroreflex responsiveness with a neck collar in 11 high-fit and 9 sedentary [based on maximal O2 consumption (VO2max) and history of physical activity] healthy young men (19-31 yr of age). Resting cardiac vagal activity was determined from the standard deviation of 100 consecutive resting R-R intervals. Baroreflex responsiveness was determined from the R-R interval responses to neck suction and pressure (repeated trials of 5-s stimuli of -20, -40, and 35 mmHg). Both RSA and the bradycardic (R-R interval) responses to neck suction of -40 mmHg were significantly greater (P less than 0.05) in the high-fit individuals (RSA, 116.5 +/- 11.5 ms; neck-suction response, 145.3 +/- 17.0 ms; mean +/- SE) compared with sedentary subjects (RSA, 65.2 +/- 6.6 ms; neck-suction response, 86.9 +/- 12.5 ms). Responses of the high-fit volunteers to the other intensities of neck stimuli (-20 and 35 mmHg) showed a similar trend but were not significantly different from those of the sedentary volunteers. The baroreflex slope derived from these data was significantly greater in the high-fit subjects (4.00 +/- 0.39 ms/mmHg) compared with the sedentary controls (2.53 +/- 0.28 ms/mmHg). These data suggest that resting cardiac vagal activity is greater, carotid-to-cardiac activity is well maintained, and baroreflex sensitivity, i.e., slope, is augmented in high-fit subjects.  相似文献   

3.
R-R interval variability (RR variability) is increasingly being used as an index of autonomic activity. High-frequency (HF) power reflects vagal modulation of the sinus node. Since vagal modulation occurs at the respiratory frequency, some investigators have suggested that HF power cannot be interpreted unless the breathing rate is controlled. We hypothesized that HF power during spontaneous breathing would not differ significantly from HF power during metronome-guided breathing. We measured HF power during spontaneous breathing in 20 healthy subjects and 19 patients with heart disease. Each subject's spontaneous breathing rate was determined, and the calculation of HF power was repeated with a metronome set to his or her average spontaneous breathing rate. There was no significant difference between the logarithm of HF power measured during spontaneous and metronome-guided breathing [4.88 +/- 0.29 vs. 5.29 +/- 0.30 ln(ms(2)), P = 0.32] in the group as a whole and when patients and healthy subjects were examined separately. We did observe a small (9.9%) decrease in HF power with increasing metronome-guided breathing rates (from 9 to 20 breaths/min). These data indicate that HF power during spontaneous and metronome-guided breathing differs at most by very small amounts. This variability is several logarithmic units less than the wide discrepancies observed between healthy subjects and cardiac patients with a heterogeneous group of cardiovascular disorders. In addition, HF power is relatively constant across the range of typical breathing rates. These data indicate that there is no need to control breathing rate to interpret HF power when RR variability (and specifically HF power) is used to identify high-risk cardiac patients.  相似文献   

4.
A double exogenous autoregressive (XXAR) causal parametric model was used to estimate the baroreflex gain (alpha(XXAR)) from spontaneous R-R interval and systolic arterial pressure (SAP) variabilities in conscious dogs. This model takes into account 1) effects of current and past SAP variations on the R-R interval (i.e., baroreflex-mediated influences), 2) specific perturbations affecting R-R interval independently of baroreflex circuit (e.g., rhythmic neural inputs modulating R-R interval independently of SAP at frequencies slower than respiration), and 3) influences of respiration-related sources acting independently of baroreflex pathway (e.g., rhythmic neural inputs modulating R-R interval independently of SAP at respiratory rate, including the effect of stimulation of low-pressure receptors). Under control conditions, alpha(XXAR) = 14.7 +/- 7.2 ms/mmHg. It decreases after nitroglycerine infusion and coronary artery occlusion, even though the decrease is significant only after nitroglycerine, and it is completely abolished by total arterial baroreceptor denervation. Moreover, alpha(XXAR) is comparable to or significantly smaller than (depending on the experimental condition) the baroreflex gains derived from sequence, power spectrum [at low frequency (LF) and high frequency (HF)], and cross-spectrum (at LF and HF) analyses and from less complex causal parametric models, thus demonstrating that simpler estimates may be biased by the contemporaneous presence of regulatory mechanisms other than baroreflex mechanisms.  相似文献   

5.
A large heart rate (HR) increase at the onset of exercise has been linked to an increased risk for adverse cardiovascular events, including cardiac death. However, the relationship between changes in cardiac autonomic regulation induced by exercise onset and the confirmed susceptibility to ventricular fibrillation (VF) has not been established. Therefore, a retrospective analysis of the HR response to exercise onset was made in mongrel dogs with healed myocardial infarctions that were either susceptible (S, n = 131) or resistant (R, n = 114) to VF (induced by a 2-min occlusion of the left circumflex artery during the last minute of exercise). The ECG was recorded, and time series analysis of HR variability (vagal activity index, the 0.24-1.04-Hz frequency component of R-R interval variability) was measured before and 30, 60, and 120 s after the onset of exercise (treadmill running). Exercise elicited significantly (ANOVA, P < 0.0001) greater increases in HR in susceptible dogs at all three times (e.g., at 60 s: R, 46.8 +/- 2.3 vs. S, 57.1 +/- 2.2 beats/min). However, the vagal activity index decreased to a similar extent in both groups of dogs (at 60 s: R, -2.8 +/- 0.1 vs. S, -3.0 +/- 0.2 ln ms2). Beta-adrenoceptor blockade (BB, propranolol 1.0 mg/kg iv) reduced the HR increase and eliminated the differences noted between the groups [at 60 s: R (n = 26), 40.4 +/- 3.2 vs. S (n = 31), 37.5 +/- 2.4 beats/min]. After BB, exercise once again elicited similar declines in vagal activity in both groups (at 60 s: R, -3.6 +/- 0.5 vs. S, -3.2 +/- 0.4 ln ms2). When considered together, these data suggest that at the onset of exercise HR increases to a greater extent in animals prone to VF compared with dogs resistant to this malignant arrhythmia due to an enhanced cardiac sympathetic activation in the susceptible dogs.  相似文献   

6.
Sympathetic activation during orthostatic stress is accompanied by a marked increase in low-frequency (LF, approximately 0.1-Hz) oscillation of sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) when arterial pressure (AP) is well maintained. However, LF oscillation of SNA during development of orthostatic neurally mediated syncope remains unknown. Ten healthy subjects who developed head-up tilt (HUT)-induced syncope and 10 age-matched nonsyncopal controls were studied. Nonstationary time-dependent changes in calf muscle SNA (MSNA, microneurography), R-R interval, and AP (finger photoplethysmography) variability during a 15-min 60 degrees HUT test were assessed using complex demodulation. In both groups, HUT during the first 5 min increased heart rate, magnitude of MSNA, LF and respiratory high-frequency (HF) amplitudes of MSNA variability, and LF and HF amplitudes of AP variability but decreased HF amplitude of R-R interval variability (index of cardiac vagal nerve activity). In the nonsyncopal group, these changes were sustained throughout HUT. In the syncopal group, systolic AP decreased from 100 to 60 s before onset of syncope; LF amplitude of MSNA variability decreased, whereas magnitude of MSNA and LF amplitude of AP variability remained elevated. From 60 s before onset of syncope, MSNA and heart rate decreased, index of cardiac vagal nerve activity increased, and AP further decreased to the level at syncope. LF oscillation of MSNA variability decreased during development of orthostatic neurally mediated syncope, preceding sympathetic withdrawal, bradycardia, and severe hypotension, to the level at syncope.  相似文献   

7.
This study was designed to assess the relationship between R-R interval length and heart rate (HR) variability in healthy subjects and patients after an acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Twenty-four-hour ambulatory ECG recordings were obtained for 76 healthy subjects and 82 post-AMI patients. The high-frequency (HF, 0.15-0.4 Hz) spectral power of R-R intervals was analyzed in 5-min sequences over 24 h and plotted as a function of the corresponding mean R-R interval length. Quadratic regression model was used to study the relationship between R-R interval length and HF power. If a distinct deflection point (R-R0) occurred in the quadratic regression (r >0.50) model before maximum R-R interval, indicating the plateau of HF power, the relationship between R-R interval and HF power was defined as saturated. Otherwise, the relationship was defined as linear (r >0.50) or low correlated (r >0.50). The relationship was saturated in 35, linear in 38, and low correlated in 3 healthy subjects. In post-AMI patients, the relationship was saturated in 9 subjects, linear in 44 subjects, and low correlated in 29 patients. The HF power analyzed from the 24-h period did not differ between the saturated and linear groups, but when analyzed from the linear portion only, HF spectral power was smaller in the linear than the saturated group both among healthy subjects (P <0.05) and post-AMI patients (P <0.05). Saturation of the HF oscillations of R-R intervals is a common phenomenon in healthy subjects and also present in post-AMI patients during ambulatory conditions. This saturation effect may bias the quantification of cardiac vagal function when HR variability is analyzed from Holter recordings.  相似文献   

8.
Short-term blood pressure (BP) variability is limited by the arterial baroreflex. Methods for measuring the spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) aim to quantify the gain of the transfer function between BP and pulse interval (PI) or the slope of the linear relationship between parallel BP and PI changes. These frequency-domain (spectral) and time-domain (sequence) techniques were tested in conscious mice equipped with telemetric devices. The autonomic relevance of these indexes was evaluated using pharmacological blockades. The significant changes of the spectral bandwidths resulting from the autonomic blockades were used to identify the low-frequency (LF) and high-frequency (HF) zones of interest. The LF gain was 1.45 +/- 0.14 ms/mmHg, with a PI delay of 0.5 s. For the HF gain, the average values were 2.0 +/- 0.19 ms/mmHg, with a null phase. LF and HF bands were markedly affected by atropine. On the same 51.2-s segments used for cross-spectral analysis, an average number of 26.4 +/- 2.2 slopes were detected, and the average slope in resting mice was 4.4 +/- 0.5 ms/mmHg. Atropine significantly reduced the slopes of the sequence method. BRS measurements obtained using the sequence technique were highly correlated to the spectral estimates. This study demonstrates the applicability of the recent methods used to estimate spontaneous BRS in mice. There was a vagal predominance in the baroreflex control of heart rate in conscious mice in the present conditions.  相似文献   

9.
We tested the hypothesis that blockade of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) and non-NMDA receptors on medullary lateral tegmental field (LTF) neurons would reduce the sympathoexcitatory responses elicited by electrical stimulation of vagal, trigeminal, and sciatic afferents, posterior hypothalamus, and midbrain periaqueductal gray as well as by activation of arterial chemoreceptors with intravenous NaCN. Bilateral microinjection of a non-NMDA receptor antagonist into LTF of urethane-anesthetized cats significantly decreased vagal afferent-evoked excitatory responses in inferior cardiac and vertebral nerves to 29 +/- 8 and 24 +/- 6% of control (n = 7), respectively. Likewise, blockade of non-NMDA receptors significantly reduced chemoreceptor reflex-induced increases in inferior cardiac (from 210 +/- 22 to 129 +/- 13% of control; n = 4) and vertebral nerves (from 253 +/- 41 to 154 +/- 20% of control; n = 7) and mean arterial pressure (from 39 +/- 7 to 21 +/- 5 mmHg; n = 8). Microinjection of muscimol, but not an NMDA receptor antagonist, caused similar attenuation of these excitatory responses. Sympathoexcitatory responses to the other stimuli were not attenuated by microinjection of a non-NMDA receptor antagonist or muscimol into LTF. In fact, excitatory responses elicited by stimulation of trigeminal, and in some cases sciatic, afferents were enhanced. These data reveal two new roles for the LTF in control of sympathetic nerve activity in cats. One, LTF neurons are involved in mediating sympathoexcitation elicited by activation of vagal afferents and arterial chemoreceptors, primarily via activation of non-NMDA receptors. Two, non-NMDA receptor-mediated activation of other LTF neurons tonically suppresses transmission in trigeminal-sympathetic and sciatic-sympathetic reflex pathways.  相似文献   

10.
The possible interactions between inhibitory vagal control of the heart and circulating levels of catecholamines in dogfish (Squalus acanthias) were studied using an in situ preparation of the heart, which retained intact its innervation from centrally cut vagus nerves. The response to peripheral vagal stimulation typically consisted of an initial cardiac arrest, followed by an escape beat, leading to renewed beating at a mean heart rate lower than the prestimulation rate (partial recovery). Cessation of vagal stimulation led to a transient increase in heart rate, above the prestimulation rate. This whole response was completely abolished by 10(-4) M atropine (a muscarinic cholinergic antagonist). The degree of vagal inhibition was evaluated in terms of both the initial, maximal cardiac interval and the mean heart rate during partial recovery, both expressed as a percentage of the prestimulation heart rate. The mean prestimulation heart rate of this preparation (36+/-4 beats min(-1)) was not affected by noradrenaline but was significantly reduced by 10(-4) M nadolol (a beta-adrenergic receptor antagonist), suggesting the existence of a resting adrenergic tone arising from endogenous catecholamines. The degree of vagal inhibition of heart rate varied with the rate of stimulation and was increased by the presence of 10(-8) M noradrenaline (the normal in vivo level in routinely active fish), while 10(-7) M noradrenaline (the in vivo level measured in disturbed or deeply hypoxic fish) reduced the cardiac response to vagal stimulation. In the presence of 10(-7) M noradrenaline, 10(-4) M nadolol further reduced the vagal response, while 10(-4) M nadolol + 10(-4) M phentolamine had no effect, indicating a complex interaction between adrenoreceptors, possibly involving presynaptic modulation of vagal inhibition.  相似文献   

11.
Exercise training improves arterial baroreflex control in heart failure (HF) rabbits. However, the mechanisms involved in the amelioration of baroreflex control are unknown. We tested the hypothesis that exercise training would increase the afferent aortic depressor nerve activity (AODN) sensitivity in ischemic-induced HF rats. Twenty ischemic-induced HF rats were divided into trained (n = 11) and untrained (n = 9) groups. Nine normal control rats were also studied. Power spectral analysis of pulse interval, systolic blood pressure, renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA), and AODN were analyzed by means of autoregressive parametric spectral and cross-spectral algorithms. Spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity of heart rate (HR) and RSNA were analyzed during spontaneous variation of systolic blood pressure. Left ventricular end-diastolic pressure was higher in HF rats compared with that in the normal control group (P = 0.0001). Trained HF rats had a peak oxygen uptake higher than untrained rats and similar to normal controls (P = 0.01). Trained HF rats had lower low-frequency [1.8 +/- 0.2 vs. 14.6 +/- 3 normalized units (nu), P = 0.0003] and higher high-frequency (97.9 +/- 0.2 vs. 85.0 +/- 3 nu, P = 0.0005) components of pulse interval than untrained rats. Trained HF rats had higher spontaneous baroreceptor sensitivity of HR (1.19 +/- 0.2 vs. 0.51 +/- 0.1 ms/mmHg, P = 0.003) and RSNA [2.69 +/- 0.4 vs. 1.29 +/- 0.3 arbitrary units (au)/mmHg, P = 0.04] than untrained rats. In HF rats, exercise training increased spontaneous AODN sensitivity toward normal levels (trained HF rats, 1,791 +/- 215; untrained HF rats, 1,150 +/- 158; and normal control rats, 2,064 +/- 327 au/mmHg, P = 0.05). In conclusion, exercise training improves AODN sensitivity in HF rats.  相似文献   

12.
The aim of the study was to clarify the role of the Y(2) receptor in regulation of vagal control of the heart, using Y(2)((-/-)) receptor-knockout mice. Adult Y(2)((+/+),(-/-)) mice (50% C57BL/6-50% 129/SvJ background) were anaesthetised and artificially ventilated. Arterial blood pressure and pulse interval was recorded and both vagus nerves were cut. The cardiac end of the right vagus nerve was stimulated supra-maximally every 30 s (7 V, 2-2.5 Hz, 5 s). Neuropeptide Y (NPY) and a Y(2) receptor agonist, N-acetyl [Leu(28, 31)]NPY 24-36, were injected intravenously in both groups of mice. N-acetyl [Leu(28, 31)] NPY 24-36 was also administered to control mice in the presence of a Y(2) receptor antagonist, BIIE0246. Stimulation of the vagus nerve increased pulse interval (PI) by approximately 100 ms. NPY and N-acetyl [Leu(28, 31)] NPY 24-36 attenuated the increase in PI evoked by vagal stimulation in control mice only. The attenuation was reduced in the presence of BIIE0246. The results presented here show in Y(2)((-/-)) receptor-knockout mice that NPY and N-acetyl [Leu(28, 31)] NPY 24-36 have no effect on PI evoked by vagal stimulation. These findings demonstrate that NPY attenuates parasympathetic activity to the heart via the Y(2) receptor.  相似文献   

13.
Depressed heart rate variability and mood are associated with increased mortality in patients with congestive heart failure (CHF). Here autonomic indexes were assessed 3 and 7 wk after left coronary artery ligation in telemetered rats, after which anxiety-like behaviors were assessed in an elevated plus maze. Low frequency (LF) and high frequency (HF) heart rate variability were reduced in CHF rats 3 wk after infarction (LF, 1.60 +/- 0.52 vs. 6.97 +/- 0.79 ms(2); and HF, 1.53 +/- 0.39 vs. 6.20 +/- 1.01 ms(2); P < 0.01). The number of sequences of interbeat intervals that correlated with arterial pressure was decreased in CHF rats at 3 and 7 wk (week 3, 26.60 +/- 10.85 vs. 59.75 +/- 11.4 sequences, P < 0.05; and week 7, 20.80 +/- 8.97 vs. 65.38 +/- 5.89 sequences, P < 0.01). Sequence gain was attenuated in CHF rats by 7 wk (1.34 +/- 0.06 vs. 2.70 +/- 0.29 ms/mmHg, P < 0.01). Coherence between interbeat interval and mean arterial blood pressure variability in the LF domain was reduced in CHF rats at 3 (0.12 +/- 0.03 vs. 0.26 +/- 0.05 k(2), P < 0.05) and 7 (0.16 +/- 0.02 vs. 0.31 +/- 0.05 k(2), P < 0.05) wk. CHF rats invariably entered the open arm of the elevated plus maze first and spent more time in the open arms (36.0 +/- 15% vs. 4.6 +/- 1.9%, P < 0.05). CHF rats also showed a tendency to jump head first off the apparatus, whereas controls did not. Together the data indicate that severe autonomic dysfunction is accompanied by escape-seeking behaviors in rats with verified CHF.  相似文献   

14.
In a previous clinical study we have demonstrated a significantly lower baroreflex-mediated bradycardic response in young women compared with men. The present study determined whether sexual dimorphism in baroreflex sensitivity in young rats also covers the reflex tachycardic response. The study was then extended to test the hypothesis that an attenuated cardiac cholinergic component of the baroreflex heart rate response in females may account for the gender difference. Baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) was expressed as the regression coefficient of the reciprocal relationship between evoked changes in blood pressure and heart rate. BRS measured in conscious rats with phenylephrine (BRS(PE)) and nitroprusside (BRS(NP)) represented the reflex bradycardic and tachycardic responses, respectively. Female rats exhibited significantly lower BRS(PE) compared with male rats (-1.53+/-0.1 vs. -2.36+/-0.13 beats x min(-1) x mmHg(-1); p < 0.05) but similar BRS(NP) (-2.60+/-0.20 vs. -2.29+/-0.17 beats x min(-1) x mmHg(-1)). Blockade of cardiac muscarinic receptors with atropine methyl bromide elicited greater attenuation of BRS(PE) in male than in female rats (72+/-4.6 vs. 53+/-6.7% inhibition; p < 0.01) and abolished the gender difference. In male rats cardiac muscarinic blockade attenuated BRS(PE) significantly more than did cardiac beta-adrenergic receptor blockade with propranolol (72+/-4.6 vs. 43+/-2.7; p < 0.01), which suggests greater dependence of BRS(PE) on the parasympathetic component. In females, muscarinic and beta-adrenergic blockade elicited similar attenuation of BRS(PE). The findings suggest that (i) BRS is differentially influenced by gender; female rats exhibit substantially lower BRS(PE) but similar BRS(NP) compared with age-matched male rats and (ii) the sexual dimorphism in BRS(PE) results, at least partly, from a smaller increase in vagal outflow to the heart in response to baroreceptor activation.  相似文献   

15.
The parasympathetic nervous system innervates the heart through two cervical vagal branches. The right vagal branch mainly influences the heart rate by the modulation of the rhythmogenesis of the sinoatrial node. The left branch predominantly influences the conduction properties of the atrioventricular (AV) node. We investigated the effect of asynchronous stimulation by the vagal nerves on the occurrence of irregularities in heart rate. In rats, the vagal nerves were isolated and cut. Different vagal stimulation patterns (continuous, pulsed) were applied. The heart was beating spontaneously under continuous vagal stimulation. In case of pulsed vagal stimulation, the atria were paced at different rates. Asynchronicity was induced by delaying the right stimulus with respect to the left stimulus (early right) or the left stimulus with respect to the right stimulus (early left). The value of the fraction of deviated R-R or P-Q intervals in the distribution in the histogram was used to characterize irregularities during a stimulation protocol (duration in case of continuous stimulation: 20 s; pulsed stimulation: 120 s). Under both stimulation patterns (continuous or pulsed), we found that early left vagal stimulation introduced a much larger fraction of deviated intervals in the R-R or P-Q histogram (in R-R: 29.1 +/- 4.9%; in P-Q: 12.90 +/- 1.95%) than early right vagal stimulation (in R-R: 7.4 +/- 2.0%; in P-Q: 1. 05 +/- 0.50%) or synchronous stimulation (in R-R: 8.2 +/- 3.6%; in P-Q: 2.15 +/- 0.75%). We conclude that early stimulation by the left vagal nerve can introduce irregularities in heart rate, mainly due to different degrees of AV nodal blockade.  相似文献   

16.
An increased risk of myocardial ischemic changes was demonstrated in patients suffering from panic disorder (PD). Using classical ECG methods, this risk cannot be evaluated in most patients. We measured the vectocardiogram (VCG) using Frank orthogonal leads and body surface maps (BSM) including 12-lead ECG. In our study of 11 PD patients (2 men, 9 women), without any seizures and pharmacological treatment and without cardiovascular symptoms, we found marked sinus tachycardia (heart rate 90.1 +/- 12.2 min(-1)) and a shorter R-R interval (678 +/- 93.6 ms) than in 27 controls (heart rate 73.6 +/- 7.7min(-1), R-R 822.7 +/- 86.4 ms) (5 men, 22 women) (p<0.001). The VCG measured spatial QRS-STT angle was more opened (70.3 +/- 24.5 degrees) than in the control group (49.5 +/- 19.5 degrees) (p<0.05). The maximum (extremum) in depolarization (DIAM max 30, 40) and repolarization (RIAM max 35) of body surface isoarea and isointegral (RIIM max) maps was less positive (p<0.001) and the minimum (DIAM min 40) was less negative than in the controls (p<0.05) even in the period free of a panic attack. Our results showed the changes in the heart electric field parameters occurred in PD patients when compared to the control group.  相似文献   

17.
Testing for the susceptibility for vasodepressor reaction in humans involves the combination of restriction of venous return by passive upright tilting and the administration of isoproterenol. To explore the basis of the vasodepressor test in humans, the present experiment examined whether a reduced cardiac volume coupled with adrenergic stimulation causes a vasodepressor reaction in rats. Vasodepressor reaction was defined as paradoxical heart rate slowing in conjunction with hypotension during inferior vena caval occlusion. Inferior vena caval occlusion was performed for 60 s and the maximum changes in R-R were measured during seven states as follows. (A) Under control conditions inferior vena caval occlusion alone accelerated the rate in 32 of 32 rats (delta R-R, -13.9 +/- 1.7 ms, p less than 0.001). (B) When inferior vena caval occlusion was performed during an infusion of isoproterenol (0.5-1.0 micrograms.min-1), a vasodepressor reaction was observed in all rats as the heart rate slowed (delta R-R, +138.1 +/- 14.8 ms, p less than 0.001). The vasodepressor reaction was further examined during isoproterenol and inferior vena caval occlusion under five additional states. (C) After atropine the vasodepressor reaction was unchanged (delta R-R, +132.7 +/- 24.8 ms, p less than 0.001). (D) After bilateral vagotomy the paradoxical slowing was eliminated. (E) After intrapericardial lidocaine the paradoxic slowing was eliminated. (F) After bilateral stellectomy nonsignificant slowing was still present, but this was markedly reduced when compared with B (p less than 0.001). (G) Following chronic chemical sympathetic denervation with 6-hydroxydopamine the paradoxic bradycardia was eliminated. Conclusions: (1) Reduced cardiac volume combined with adrenergic stimulation can stimulate a vasodepressor reaction; (2) the vasodepressor reaction requires signalling by the afferent but not efferent vagal fibers; (3) the bradycardia is mainly due to withdrawal of sympathetic efferent tone.  相似文献   

18.
K Hogan  F Markos 《Nitric oxide》2007,16(1):110-117
We investigated whether vagal cardiac cholinergic facilitation by nitric oxide (NO) is mediated by cardiac muscarinic receptor subtypes in the vagally innervated rat right atrium in vitro. Experiments were carried out in the presence of atenolol (4 microM). The right vagus was stimulated at 4, 8, 16, 32 Hz; pulse duration 1 ms at 20 V for 20s; vagal postganglionic activation was achieved using nicotine (0.1, 0.3, 0.5, 1mM) and the effect on cardiac interval (ms) assessed. Pirenzepine (1 microM), a M1 antagonist, attenuated vagally induced increase in cardiac interval. L-Arginine (0.34 mM) superfused with pirenzepine failed to reverse this attenuation, however, L-arginine applied alone reversed the reduction vagal cardiac slowing. Similarly, sodium nitroprusside (10 microM) applied alone, and not together with pirenzepine, was able to reverse the attenuation of vagal effects caused by pirenzepine. Synthetic MT7 (1 nM) toxin, a selective M1 antagonist confirmed these results. M3 antagonism using para-fluorohexahydrosiladifenidol (p-F-HHSiD) (300 nM) and M4 antagonism with PD 102807 (200 nM) did not affect the vagally induced increase in cardiac interval. Nicotine induced increase in cardiac interval was not altered by pirenzepine. These results show that antagonism of M1 receptors on cardiac vagal preganglionic fibres reduces vagal efficacy which can be recovered by either a nitric oxide synthase substrate or a NO donor.  相似文献   

19.
Acetylcholine receptors (AChR) are important in premotor and efferent control of autonomic function; however, the extent to which cardiovascular function is affected by genetic variations in AChR sensitivity is unknown. We assessed heart rate variability (HRV) and baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) in rats bred for resistance (FRL) or sensitivity (FSL) to cholinergic agents compared with Sprague-Dawley rats (SD), confirmed by using hypothermic responses evoked by the muscarinic agonist oxotremorine (0.2 mg/kg i.p.) (n > or = 9 rats/group). Arterial pressure, ECG, and splanchnic sympathetic (SNA) and phrenic (PNA) nerve activities were acquired under anesthesia (urethane 1.3 g/kg i.p.). HRV was assessed in time and frequency domains from short-term R-R interval data, and spontaneous heart rate BRS was obtained by using a sequence method at rest and after administration of atropine methylnitrate (mATR, 2 mg/kg i.v.). Heart rate and SNA baroreflex gains were assessed by using conventional pharmacological methods. FRL and FSL were normotensive but displayed elevated heart rates, reduced HRV and HF power, and spontaneous BRS compared with SD. mATR had no effect on these parameters in FRL or FSL, indicating reduced cardiovagal tone. FSL exhibited reduced PNA frequency, longer baroreflex latency, and reduced baroreflex gain of heart rate and SNA compared with FRL and SD, indicating in FSL dual impairment of cardiac and circulatory baroreflexes. These findings show that AChR resistance results in reduced cardiac muscarinic receptor function leading to cardiovagal insufficiency. In contrast, AChR sensitivity results in autonomic and respiratory abnormalities arising from alterations in central muscarinic and or other neurotransmitter receptors.  相似文献   

20.
To better understand the central mechanisms that mediate increases in heart rate (HR) during psychological stress, we examined the effects of systemic and intramedullary (raphe region) administration of the serotonin-1A (5-HT(1A)) receptor agonist 8-hydroxy-2-(di-n-propylamino)tetraline (8-OH-DPAT) on cardiac changes elicited by restraint in hooded Wistar rats with preimplanted ECG telemetric transmitters. 8-OH-DPAT reduced basal HR from 356 +/- 12 to 284 +/- 12 beats/min, predominantly via a nonadrenergic, noncholinergic mechanism. Restraint stress caused tachycardia (an initial transient increase from 318 +/- 3 to 492 +/- 21 beats/min with a sustained component of 379 +/- 12 beats/min). beta-Adrenoreceptor blockade with atenolol suppressed the sustained component, whereas muscarinic blockade with methylscopolamine (50 microg/kg) abolished the initial transient increase, indicating that sympathetic activation and vagal withdrawal were responsible for the tachycardia. Systemic administration of 8-OH-DPAT (10, 30, and 100 microg/kg) attenuated stress-induced tachycardia in a dose-dependent manner, and this effect was suppressed by the 5-HT(1A) antagonist WAY-100635 (100 microg/kg). Given alone, the antagonist had no effect. Systemically injected 8-OH-DPAT (100 microg/kg) attenuated the sympathetically mediated sustained component (from +85 +/- 19 to +32 +/- 9 beats/min) and the vagally mediated transient (from +62 +/- 5 to +25 +/- 3 beats/min). Activation of 5-HT(1A) receptors in the medullary raphe by microinjection of 8-OH-DPAT mimicked the antitachycardic effect of the systemically administered drug but did not affect basal HR. We conclude that tachycardia induced by restraint stress is due to a sustained increase in cardiac sympathetic activity associated with a transient vagal withdrawal. Activation of central 5-HT(1A) receptors attenuates this tachycardia by suppressing autonomic effects. At least some of the relevant receptors are located in the medullary raphe-parapyramidal area.  相似文献   

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