首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 765 毫秒
1.
Venous distensibility of the lower limbs was assessed in six healthy men who were submitted twice successively to 1 month of -6 degrees head-down bedrest, with and without lower body negative pressure (LBNP) (LBNP subjects and control subjects, respectively). Venous capacity (delta Vv,max, in ml.100 ml-1) of the legs was determined by mercury strain gauge plethysmography with venous occlusion. Plethysmographic measurements were made on each subject before (Dc), during (D6 and D20) and after (5th day of recovery, D+5) bedrest. During bedrest, LBNP was applied daily, several times a day to the subjects submitted to this procedure. Results showed a gradual increase in Vv,max (ml.100 ml-1) throughout the bedrest, both in the control group [delta Vv,max = 2.11 SD 0.54 at Dc, 2.69 SD 0.29 at D6, 4.39 SD 2.08 at D20, 2.39 SD 0.69 at D+5, P less than 0.001 (ANOVA)] and in the LBNP group [delta Vv,max = 2.07 SD 0.71 at Dc, 2.85 SD 1.19 at D6, 3.75 SD 1.74 at D20, 2.43 SD 0.94 at D+5, P less than 0.001 (ANOVA)], without significant LBNP effect. These increases were of the same order as those encountered during spaceflight. It is concluded that -6 degrees head-down bedrest is a good model to simulate the haemodynamic changes induced by exposure to weightlessness and that LBNP did not seem to be a good technique to counteract the adverse effects of weightlessness on the capacitance vessels of the lower limbs. This latter conclusion raises the question of the role and magnitude of leg venous capacitance in venous return and cardiac regulation.  相似文献   

2.
Upright posture and lower body negative pressure (LBNP) both induce reductions in central blood volume. However, regional circulatory responses to postural changes and LBNP may differ. Therefore, we studied regional blood flow and blood volume changes in 10 healthy subjects undergoing graded lower-body negative pressure (-10 to -50 mmHg) and 8 subjects undergoing incremental head-up tilt (HUT; 20 degrees , 40 degrees , and 70 degrees ) on separate days. We continuously measured blood pressure (BP), heart rate, and regional blood volumes and blood flows in the thoracic, splanchnic, pelvic, and leg segments by impedance plethysmography and calculated regional arterial resistances. Neither LBNP nor HUT altered systolic BP, whereas pulse pressure decreased significantly. Blood flow decreased in all segments, whereas peripheral resistances uniformly and significantly increased with both HUT and LBNP. Thoracic volume decreased while pelvic and leg volumes increased with HUT and LBNP. However, splanchnic volume changes were directionally opposite with stepwise decreases in splanchnic volume with LBNP and stepwise increases in splanchnic volume during HUT. Splanchnic emptying in LBNP models regional vascular changes during hemorrhage. Splanchnic filling may limit the ability of the splanchnic bed to respond to thoracic hypovolemia during upright posture.  相似文献   

3.
This study tested the hypothesis that cardiovascular and hormonal responses to lower body negative pressure (LBNP) would be altered by 4-h head down bed rest (HDBR) in 11 healthy young men. In post-HDBR testing, three subjects failed to finish the protocol due to presyncopal symptoms, heart rate was increased during LBNP compared with pre-HDBR, mean arterial blood pressure was elevated at 0, -10, and -20 mmHg and reduced at -40 mmHg, central venous pressure (CVP) and cardiac stroke volume were reduced at all levels of LBNP. Plasma concentrations of renin, angiotensin II, and aldosterone were significantly lower after HDBR. Renin and angiotensin II increased in response to LBNP only post-HDBR. There was no effect of HDBR or LBNP on norepinephrine while epinephrine tended to increase at -40 mmHg post-HDBR (P = 0.07). Total blood volume was not significantly reduced. Splanchnic blood flow taken from ultrasound measurement of the portal vein was higher at each level of LBNP post-compared with pre-HDBR. The gain of the cardiopulmonary baroreflex relating changes in total peripheral resistance to CVP was increased after HDBR, but splanchnic vascular resistance was actually reduced. These results are consistent with our hypothesis and suggest that cardiovascular instability following only 4-h HDBR might be related to altered hormonal and/or neural control of regional vascular resistance. Impaired ability to distribute blood away from the splanchnic region was associated with reduced stroke volume, elevated heart rate, and the inability to protect mean arterial pressure.  相似文献   

4.
This paper considers a model developed to study the cardiovascular control system response to orthostatic stress as induced by two variations of lower body negative pressure (LBNP) experiments. This modeling approach has been previously applied to study control responses to transition from rest to aerobic exercise, to transition to non-REM sleep and to orthostatic stress as produced by the head up tilt (HUT) experiment. LBNP induces a blood volume shift because negative pressure changes the volume loading characteristics of the compartment which is subject to the negative pressure. This volume shift induces a fall in blood pressure which must be counteracted by a complicated control response involving a variety of mechanisms of the cardiovascular control system. There are a number of medical issues connected to these questions such as orthostatic intolerance in the elderly resulting in dizziness or fainting during the transition from sitting to standing. The model presented here is used to study the interaction of changes in systemic resistance, unstressed venous volume, venous compliance, heart rate, and contractility in the control of orthostatic stress. The overall short term response depends on a combination of these physiological reactions which may vary from individual to individual. There remain open questions about which factors have greater importance. The model simulations are compared to experimental data collected for LBNP exerted from the hips to feet and from ribs to feet.  相似文献   

5.
Astronauts consume fewer calories during spaceflight and return to earth with an increased risk of orthostatic intolerance. Whether a caloric deficiency modifies orthostatic responses is not understood. Thus, we determined the effects of a hypocaloric diet (25% caloric restriction) during 6° head down bedrest (an analog of spaceflight) on autonomic neural control during lower body negative pressure (LBNP). Nine healthy young men completed a randomized crossover bedrest study, consisting of four (2 weeks each) interventions (normocaloric bedrest, normocaloric ambulatory, hypocaloric bedrest, hypocaloric ambulatory), each separated by 5 months. Muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) was recorded at baseline following normocaloric and hypocaloric interventions. Heart rate (HR) and arterial pressure were recorded before, during, and after 3 consecutive stages (7 min each) of LBNP (-15, -30, -45 mmHg). Caloric and posture effects during LBNP were compared using two-way ANOVA with repeated measures. There was a strong trend toward reduced basal MSNA following caloric restriction alone (normcaloric vs. hypocaloric: 22±3 vs. 14±4 burst/min, p = 0.06). Compared to the normocaloric ambulatory, both bedrest and caloric restriction were associated with lower systolic blood pressure during LBNP (p<0.01); however, HR responses were directionally opposite (i.e., increase with bedrest, decrease with caloric restriction). Survival analysis revealed a significant reduction in orthostatic tolerance following caloric restriction (normocaloric finishers: 12/16; hypocaloric finishers: 6/16; χ2, p = 0.03). Caloric restriction modifies autonomic responses to LBNP, which may decrease orthostatic tolerance after spaceflight.  相似文献   

6.
During a space flight the human body responds to many different gravities. The launching of the rocket, the weightlessness, the re-entry of the spacecraft, and other factors influence the astronaut's body. The fluid shifts and the effect on the cardiovascular system arising from these gravitational changes have been frequently studied in space medicine by using body tilting, lower body negative pressure (LBNP) and centrifugal accelerators. There exist, however, few reports about the changes in whole body blood volume distribution caused by body tilting. These changes can be measured using radioisotopes: scintigraphy using 99mTechnetium-labeled human serum albumin (99mTc-HSA), etc. In humans, however, because the visual field of the scintillation camera is so small, the simultaneous measurement of whole body blood volume distribution cannot be done during body tilting. We therefore used rats, whose whole bodies can be encompassed within the visual field of the camera, and we discussed the changes in blood volume distribution induced by body tilting. We also measured the blood concentrations in each organ by using whole body autoradiography in mice, and discussed the effect of postural changes on some abdominal organs.  相似文献   

7.
卧床前后压力感受性反射机能变化的研究   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
许多数据表明长期失重以后立位耐力降低可能与压力感受性反射功能的改变有关。本文比较了两组被试者15天低动力卧床前后的立位耐力。以血压调节模型为基础分析了两种不同方式卧床前后单纯立位和下身负压加立位时压力感受性反射功能的改变,并用颈部加压及下身负压对中枢调节功能改变进行了观察。结果表明严格的头低位卧床后,立位耐力下降及压力感受性反射功能改变明显大于半日平卧半日倚坐者。而压力感受性反射功能的改变,特别是中枢神经系统调节功能的紊乱,是卧床后立位耐力降低的主要原因。从这种考虑为基础,作者提出了改变失重或模拟失重状态下的血液分布,调整对压力感受器的刺激,可能是预防心血管失调的有效方法。  相似文献   

8.
Orthostatic intolerance follows actual weightlessness and weightlessness simulated by bed rest. Orthostasis immediately after acute exercise imposes greater cardiovascular stress than orthostasis without prior exercise. We hypothesized that 5 min/day of simulated orthostasis [supine lower body negative pressure (LBNP)] immediately following LBNP exercise maintains orthostatic tolerance during bed rest. Identical twins (14 women, 16 men) underwent 30 days of 6 degrees head-down tilt bed rest. One of each pair was randomly selected as a control, and their sibling performed 40 min/day of treadmill exercise while supine in 53 mmHg (SD 4) [7.05 kPa (SD 0.50)] LBNP. LBNP continued for 5 min after exercise stopped. Head-up tilt at 60 degrees plus graded LBNP assessed orthostatic tolerance before and after bed rest. Hemodynamic measurements accompanied these tests. Bed rest decreased orthostatic tolerance time to a greater extent in control [34% (SD 10)] than in countermeasure subjects [13% (SD 20); P < 0.004]. Controls exhibited cardiac stroke volume reduction and relative cardioacceleration typically seen after bed rest, yet no such changes occurred in the countermeasure group. These findings demonstrate that 40 min/day of supine LBNP treadmill exercise followed immediately by 5 min of resting LBNP attenuates, but does not fully prevent, the orthostatic intolerance associated with 30 days of bed rest. We speculate that longer postexercise LBNP may improve results. Together with our earlier related studies, these ground-based results support spaceflight evaluation of postexercise orthostatic stress as a time-efficient countermeasure against postflight orthostatic intolerance.  相似文献   

9.
If lower body negative pressure (LBNP) loaded on exercise in weightlessness environment is able to derive a comparable cardiovascular responses to these in the ground, it should be identified as an optimal LBNP for exercise in space. To investigate the LBNP, 7 young subjects were exercised 4 work rates stepping up every 50 watts from 50 watts to 200 watts every 5 minutes in the upright position or 6 degree head down tilt position with each LBNP of 20, 40, 60, 80, and 100 mmHg. Oxygen uptake during tilt exercise with over 60 mmHg LBNP was not different from it in upright exercise. Heart rate and systolic arterial pressure responses to exercise were very similar between tilt exercise with 60 mmHg LBNP and upright exercise. In conclusion, the optimal LBNP loaded on exercise in space should be around 60 mmHg.  相似文献   

10.
We studied the relation between changes in pulmonary and systemic hemodynamics to those in the airway resistance, respiratory tissue mechanics, and thoracic gas volume (TGV) following acute hemorrhage and blood reinfusion in rats. Forced oscillation technique was used to measure airway resistance (Raw), respiratory tissue damping, and elastance at baseline and after stepwise 1-ml blood withdrawals up to 5 ml total, followed by stepwise reinfusion up to full restoration. Mean systemic (Pam) and pulmonary arterial pressures and suprarenal aortic blood flow were measured at each step. In supplemental animals, plethysmographic TGV, Pam, and respiratory mechanics measurements were performed. Blood volume loss (BVL) led to proportional decreases in Raw (66.5 ± 8.8 vs. 44.8 ± 9.0 cmH(2)O·s·l(-1) with 5 ml, P < 0.001), Pam, and aortic blood flow. In contrast, tissue damping increased significantly (1,070 ± 91 vs. 1,235 ± 105 cmH(2)O/l, P = 0.009 with 5 ml BVL), whereas tissue elastance did not change significantly. TGV significantly increased with acute BVL (3.7 ± 0.2 vs. 4.2 ± 0.2 ml, P = 0.01). Stepwise reinfusions produced opposite changes in the above parameters, with Raw reaching a higher value than baseline (P = 0.001) upon full volume restoration. Both adrenalin (P = 0.015) and noradrenalin levels were elevated (P = 0.010) after 5-ml blood withdrawal. Our data suggest that the decreases in Raw following BVL may be attributed to the following: 1) an increased TGV enhancing airway parenchymal tethering forces; and 2) an increase in circulating catecholamines. The apparent beneficial effect of a reduction in Raw in acute hemorrhagic shock is counteracted by an increase in dead space and the appearance of peripheral mechanical heterogeneities due to de-recruitment of the pulmonary vasculature.  相似文献   

11.
We tested whether seal location at iliac crest (IC) or upper abdomen (UA), before and during lower body negative pressure (LBNP), would affect thoracic electrical impedance, hepatic blood flow, and central cardiovascular responses to LBNP. After 30 min of supine rest, LBNP at -40 mm Hg was applied for 15 min, either at IC or UA, in 14 healthy males. Plasma density and indocyanine green concentrations assessed plasma volume changes and hepatic perfusion. With both sealing types, LBNP-induced effects remained unchanged for mean arterial pressure (-3.0+/-1.1 mm Hg), cardiac output (-1.0 l min(-1)), and plasma volume (-11 %). Heart rate was greater during UA (80.6+/-3.3 bpm) than IC (76.0+/-2.5 bpm) (p<0.01) and thoracic impedance increased more using UA (3.2+/-0.2 Omega) than IC (1.8+/-0.2 Omega) (p<0.0001). Furthermore, during supine rest, UA was accompanied by lower thoracic impedance (26.9+/-1.1 vs 29.0+/-0.8 Omega, p<0.001) and hepatic perfusion (1.6 vs 1.8 l.min(-1), p<0.05) compared to IC. The data suggest that the reduction in central blood volume in response to LBNP depends on location of the applied seal. The sealing in itself altered blood volume distribution and hepatic perfusion in supine resting humans. Finally, application of LBNP with the seal at the upper abdomen induced a markedly larger reduction in central blood volume and greater increases in heart rate than when the seal was located at the iliac crest.  相似文献   

12.
Lower body negative pressure (LBNP) was used during the Mir spaceflight in a study of orthostatic tolerance. Hemodynamic responses were measured including heart rate, blood pressure, cerebral artery blood flow, and lower limb vascular resistance. Results showed that femoral flow volume decreased, which may be due to hypovolemia and reduced cardiac output. Additional changes in femoral vascular response and cerebral to femoral blood flow are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
In 1951 Gauer, Henry and Sieker proposed that "central hyper-volemia" might produce a diuresis that serves to reduce blood volume, a postulated negative-feedback system for the control of blood volume. Recent surprising results from human spaceflight indicate that although a central hyper-volemia takes place in weightlessness, an increase in salt and urine excretion cannot be observed. We hypothesised that on earth the mediastinum is shaped by gravity because of the gravity dependent hydrostatic gradient in the blood filled cavities and that its unloading by weightlessness reduces the wall stretch in the atria, thus resulting in reduced sodium and urine excretion. Therefore we have applied the principle of the "Iron Lung" (lung pressure manipulator LPM) in combination with a simulation method of weightlessness, head down tilt bed rest (HDT), to test this hypothesis. We found that similar to weightlessness, not only urinary excretion, but also evaporative water loss was reduced and that diastolic blood pressure increased.  相似文献   

14.
(1) The aetiology of one of the most striking physiological changes occurring during space-flight, the loss of red blood cells, remains unknown, and its precise time-pattern in flight has not yet been studied. (2) It is suggested that the changes during space-flight responsible for loss of red blood cells in man are (a) loss of plasma volume resulting from disappearance of hydrostatic pressure in the circulation during weightlessness and (b) reduced energy expended in maintenance of form, posture and locomotion resulting from elimination of the usual gravitational load on the muscles. Quadrupeds, like rats, would be expected to suffer minimal blood shifts in weightlessness and therefore have an unchanged plasma volume. However, since in weightlessness the activity-related energy expenditure by the muscles is reduced, the accompanying reduced oxygen demand by the tissues would cause a reduction in erythropoietin levels and so in the production of red blood cells, and a progressive lowering of the total red blood cell mass toward a new steady-state level. (3) Loss of plasma volume alone does not explain the observed loss of red blood cells in astronauts because, in the three manned Skylab missions, as the duration of the missions increased, loss of red blood cell mass decreased, whereas loss of plasma volume increased. This discrepancy is, however, well accounted for by the above hypothesis by taking into consideration the increased level of exercise of the astronauts as the duration of the mission increased. (4) Though water submersion of human subjects does mimic the effects of weightlessness, such effects were overriden in sea mammals because of adaptation to other factors associated with a life in the sea. (5) From the presented analysis of haemopoietic changes observed in spaceflight, an experiment can be designed for a future flight to uncover the causes and mechanisms of these changes and provide a basis for developing protective measures. Thus, the space environment can be used as an investigative tool to enhance the knowledge of the function of the haemopoietic system, which is a major homeostatic system of man and other vertebrates.  相似文献   

15.
We have recently summarized our data concerning endurance exercise training and its effect on blood pressure regulation during lower body negative pressure (LBNP). We found that endurance trained (ET) subjects were less tolerant to LBNP than their untrained (UT) counterparts. This decreased tolerance to LBNP was linked to a fitness related adaptation in cardiac compliance, an attenuated cardiopulmonary reflex regulation of peripheral vasoconstriction and an attenuated aortic-cardiac reflex. More recently we have found that 15 days of bed rest deconditioning (a severe form of detraining) in UT subjects resulted in a more responsive aortic-cardiac reflex. In severe detraining investigations, spaceflight and bed rest deconditioning a reduction in total blood and plasma volume were the manifest physiological changes. Therefore, we postulate that the increased aortic-reflex responsiveness was a compensation for the blood and plasma volume losses associated with detraining. Subsequently, we hypothesized that a generalized reduction of the normal daily aerobic activities of a healthy, young adult population would produce a moderate reduction in total blood and plasma volume and an up-regulation of the reflex blood pressure regulatory mechanisms.  相似文献   

16.
The interaction between the gravitational field, the position of the body, and the functional characteristics of the blood vessels determines the distribution of intravascular volume. In turn, this distribution determines cardiac pump function. One of the most profound circulatory changes that occurs in man during exposure to weightlessness is a cephalad redistribution of fluid caused by the lack of hydrostatic pressure in this microgravitative environment. The cephalad redistribution of fluid results in a loss of blood volume and then induces a decrease in preload. Recently, a decrease in sensitivity of arteriole to catecholamine has reported in rats of simulated weightlessness. This change in arteriole may reduce afterload. As a result, cardiovascular system may be shifted to a hypokinetic state during weightlessness condition for long-term. Echocardiographic data from astronauts during space flight showed an increase in heart rate, a 12 % decrease in stroke volume, and a 16 % decrease in left end diastolic volume. Electron-microscopic studies have shown changes in cardiac morphology in rats after exposure to microgravity for 7-12.5 days. After the COSMOS 2044 flight for 14 days, the light-microscopic studies have shown an atrophy of papillary muscles in rats left cardiac ventricle. It is not clear whether the function of atrophic myocardium is impaired. The data in three aspects as mentioned above suggest that weightlessness or simulated weightlessness may decrease the myocardial function. However, definite changes in cardiac performance have been hard to prove due to many limits. This studies were to answer two questions: Is the myocardial contractility depressed in rats subjected to simulated weightlessness for four weeks? What are the underlying mechanisms of the changing contractility?  相似文献   

17.
The hypothesis tested was that there are significant transient changes in the cardiovascular variables after rapid onset and release of mild lower body negative pressure (LBNP, -20 mmHg), even in experimental situations where there is no detectable change in steady-state values. Twelve subjects participated in the study. Heart rate, stroke volume (SV), cardiac output, mean arterial pressure (MAP), total peripheral resistance (TPR), acral and nonacral skin blood flow, and blood flow velocity in the brachial artery were continuously recorded during the pre-LBNP period (0-120 s), during LBNP (120-420 s), and during the post-LBNP period (420-600 s). The main finding was that MAP is transiently but strongly affected by rapid changes in LBNP as small as -20 mmHg. There was also a characteristic asymmetry in cardiovascular responses to the onset and release of LBNP, particularly in the responses in SV. The transient changes in MAP indicate that the neural responses that affect TPR are not fast enough to compensate for the rapid changes in LBNP. In this case, the arterial baroreceptors will be activated as well as the low-pressure baroreceptors that sense central venous pressure. This must be taken into consideration in future discussions of the results of LBNP protocols.  相似文献   

18.
目的:观察中期(4周)尾部悬吊大鼠在立位应激下的心血管反应。方法:采用本实验室改进的尾部悬吊方法,利用头高位倾斜和下体负压模拟立位应激,通过股动脉插管和心电图记录检测大鼠血压和心率改变。结果:与对照组相比,4周尾部悬吊(SUS)大鼠体重下降及后肢承重骨骼肌萎缩;其静息血压和心率与对照组(CON)相比无明显差别(P0.05);在两组大鼠中,头高位倾斜和下体负压均可导致血压降低和心率加快,但SUS大鼠平均动脉压下降幅度与CON大鼠相比显著增大(P0.05),而两组的心率增快幅度并无明显差别(P0.05)。结论:4周尾部悬吊大鼠在立位应激下维持血压稳定的能力减弱,可用于中期失重/模拟失重后立位耐力不良机理的研究。  相似文献   

19.
Papers from the 17th Annual International Gravitational Physiology Meeting in Warsaw, Poland in 1996 are presented. Topics covered include gravitational physiology results from spaceflight and weightlessness studies, simulated weightlessness experiments including hypokinesia, immersion, and bedrest, research on bone and muscle tissue and lower body negative pressure.  相似文献   

20.
Orthostatic stress leads to a reduction in central venous pressure (CVP), which is an index of cardiac preload. Skin surface cooling has been shown to improve orthostatic tolerance, although the mechanism resulting in this outcome is unclear. One possible mechanism may be that skin surface cooling attenuates the drop in CVP during an orthostatic challenge, thereby preserving cardiac filling. To test this hypothesis, CVP, arterial blood pressure, heart rate, and skin blood flow, as well as skin and sublingual temperatures, were recorded in nine healthy subjects during lower body negative pressure (LBNP) in both normothermic and skin surface cooling conditions. Cardiac output was also measured via acetylene rebreathing. Progressive LBNP was applied at -10, -15, -20, and -40 mmHg at 5 min/stage. Before LBNP, skin surface cooling lowered mean skin temperature, increased CVP, and increased mean arterial blood pressure (all P < 0.001) but did not change mean heart rate (P = 0.38). Compared with normothermic conditions, arterial blood pressure remained elevated throughout progressive LBNP. Although progressive LBNP decreased CVP under both thermal conditions, during cooling CVP at each stage of LBNP was significantly greater relative to normothermia. Moreover, at higher levels of LBNP with skin cooling, stroke volume was significantly greater relative to normothermic conditions. These data indicate that skin surface cooling induced an upward shift in CVP throughout LBNP, which may be a key factor for preserving preload, stroke volume, and blood pressure and improving orthostatic tolerance.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号