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1.
Shuttle astronauts currently drink approximately a quart of water with eight salt tablets before reentry to restore lost body fluid and thereby reduce the likelihood of cardiovascular instability and syncope during reentry and after landing. However, the saline loading countermeasure is not entirely effective in restoring orthostatic tolerance to preflight levels. We tested the hypothesis that the effectiveness of this countermeasure could be improved with the use of a vasopressin analog, 1-deamino-8-D-arginine vasopressin (dDAVP). The rationale for this approach is that reducing urine formation with exogenous vasopressin should increase the magnitude and duration of the vascular volume expansion produced by the saline load, and in so doing improve orthostatic tolerance during reentry and postflight.  相似文献   

2.
The purpose of the present study was to investigate the changes of orthostatic tolerance and cardiac function during 21 d head-down tilt (HDT) bed rest and effect of lower body negative pressure in the first and the last week in humans. Twelve healthy male volunteers were exposed to -6 degrees HDT bed rest for 21 d. Six subjects received -30 mmHg LBNP sessions for 1 h per day from the 1st to the 7th day and from the 15th to the 21st day of the HDT, and six others served as control. Orthostatic tolerance was assessed by means of standard tilt test. Stroke volume (SV), cardiac output (CO), preejection period (PEP) and left ventricular ejection time (LVET) were measured before and during HDT. Before HDT, all the subjects in the two groups completed the tilt tests. After 10 d and 21 d of HDT, all the subjects of the control group and one subject of the LBNP group could not complete the tilt test due to presyncopal or syncopal symptoms. The mean upright time in the control group (15.0 +/- 3.2 min) was significantly shorter than those in the LBNP group (19.7 +/- 0.9 min). SV and CO decreased significantly in the control group on days 3 and 10 of HDT, but remained unchanged throughout HDT in the LBNP group. A significant increase in PEP/LVET was observed on days 3 and 14 of HDT in both groups. The PEP/LVET in the LBNP group was significantly lower on day 3 of HDT, while LVET in the LBNP group was significantly higher on days 3, 7 and 14 of HDT than those in the control group. The results of this study suggest that brief daily LBNP sessions used in the first and the last weeks of 21 d HDT bed rest were effective in diminished the effect of head-down tilt on orthostatic tolerance, and LBNP might partially improve cardiac pumping function and cardiac systole function.  相似文献   

3.
In the early phase of the Space Shuttle program, NASA flight surgeons implemented a fluid-loading countermeasure in which astronauts were instructed to ingest eight 1-g salt tablets with 960 ml of water approximately 2 hours prior to reentry from space. This fluid loading regimen was intended to enhance orthostatic tolerance by replacing circulating plasma volume reduced during the space mission. Unfortunately, fluid loading failed to replace plasma volume in groundbased experiments and has proven minimally effective as a countermeasure against post-spaceflight orthostatic intolerance. In addition to the reduction of plasma volume, central venous pressure (CVP) is reduced during exposure to actual and groundbased analogs of microgravity. In the present study, we hypothesized that the reduction in CVP due to exposure to microgravity represents a resetting of the CVP operating point to a lower threshold. A lower CVP 'setpoint' might explain the failure of fluid loading to restore plasma volume. In order to test this hypothesis, we conducted an investigation in which we administered an acute volume load (stimulus) and measured responses in CVP, plasma volume and renal functions. If our hypothesis is true, we would expect the elevation in CVP induced by saline infusion to return to its pre-infusion levels in both HDT and upright control conditions despite lower vascular volume during HDT. In contrast to previous experiments, our approach is novel in that it provides information on alterations in CVP and vascular volume during HDT that are necessary for interpretation of the proposed CVP operating point resetting hypothesis.  相似文献   

4.
The first objective of this study was to confirm that 4 days of head-down tilt (HDT) were sufficient to induce orthostatic intolerance, and to check if 4 days of physical confinement may also induce orthostatic intolerance. Evidence of orthostatic intolerance during tilt-up tests was obtained from blood pressure and clinical criteria. The second objective was to quantify the arterial and venous changes associated with orthostatic intolerance and to check whether abnormal responses to the tilt test and lower body negative pressure (LBNP) may occur in the absence of blood pressure or clinical signs of orthostatic intolerance. The cerebral and lower limb arterial blood flow and vascular resistance, the flow redistribution between these two areas, and the femoral vein distension were assessed during tilt-up and LBNP by ultrasound. Eight subjects were given 4 days of HDT and, 1 month later, 4 days of physical confinement. Tilt and LBNP test were performed pre- and post-HDT and confinement. Orthostatic intolerance was significantly more frequent after HDT (63%) than after confinement (25%, P<0.001). Cerebral haemodynamic responses to tilt-up and LBNP tests were similar pre- and post-HDT or confinement. Conversely, during both tilt and LBNP tests the femoral vascular resistances increased less (P<0.002), and the femoral blood flow reduced less (P<0.001) after HDT than before HDT or after confinement. The cerebral to femoral blood flow ratio increased less after HDT than before (P<0.002) but remained unchanged before and after confinement. This ratio was significantly more disturbed in the subjects who did not complete the tilt test. The femoral superficial vein was more distended during post-HDT LBNP than pre-HDT or after confinement (P<0.01). In conclusion, 4 days of HDT were enough to alter the lower limb arterial vasoconstriction and venous distensibility during tilt-up and LBNP, which reduced the flow redistribution in favour of the brain in all HDT subjects. Confinement did not alter significantly the haemodynamic responses to orthostatic tests. The cerebral to femoral blood flow ratio measured during LBNP was the best predictor of orthostatic intolerance. Accepted: 12 December 1997  相似文献   

5.
Prolonged exposure to microgravity, as well as its ground-based analog, head-down bed rest (HDBR), reduces orthostatic tolerance in humans. While skin surface cooling improves orthostatic tolerance, it remains unknown whether this could be an effective countermeasure to preserve orthostatic tolerance following HDBR. We therefore tested the hypothesis that skin surface cooling improves orthostatic tolerance after prolonged HDBR. Eight subjects (six men and two women) participated in the investigation. Orthostatic tolerance was determined using a progressive lower-body negative pressure (LBNP) tolerance test before HDBR during normothermic conditions and on day 16 or day 18 of 6° HDBR during normothermic and skin surface cooling conditions (randomized order post-HDBR). The thermal conditions were achieved by perfusing water (normothermia ~34°C and skin surface cooling ~12-15°C) through a tube-lined suit worn by each subject. Tolerance tests were performed after ~30 min of the respective thermal stimulus. A cumulative stress index (CSI; mmHg LBNP·min) was determined for each LBNP protocol by summing the product of the applied negative pressure and the duration of LBNP at each stage. HDBR reduced normothermic orthostatic tolerance as indexed by a reduction in the CSI from 1,037 ± 96 mmHg·min to 574 ± 63 mmHg·min (P < 0.05). After HDBR, skin surface cooling increased orthostatic tolerance (797 ± 77 mmHg·min) compared with normothermia (P < 0.05). While the reduction in orthostatic tolerance following prolonged HDBR was not completely reversed by acute skin surface cooling, the identified improvements may serve as an important and effective countermeasure for individuals exposed to microgravity, as well as immobilized and bed-stricken individuals.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
To determine whether exercise and Lower Body Negative Pressure (LBNP) during 28 days of -6 degrees head-down tilt (HDT) would modify orthostatic tolerance and blood volume regulating hormones, twelve healthy men were assigned to either a no- countermeasure (No-CM, n=6), or a countermeasure (CM, n=6) group. LBNP sessions consisted of 15 minutes exposure to -30 mm Hg, on days 16, 18, 20 and 22-28 of HDT. Muscular exercise began on day 8 and consisted of combined graded dynamic and isometric resistance bilateral leg exercise on a specially designed supine ergometer, in two sessions of 15-20 min. each, every day, 6 days per week. A tilt test was performed before and at the end of HDT. Changes in resting plasma volume from control day (D-5) to HDT day 24 were -11.2% for No-CM and -2.2% for CM. After HDT three among the 6 subjects of the No-CM group presented presyncopal or syncopal symptoms, no tilt test was interrupted in CM group. Atrial Natriuretic Peptide (ANP) decreased at day 7 for the two groups and remained low during all the HDT period for No-CM group only. Plasma Renin Activity and Aldosterone increased at day 7 and remained elevated for the two groups. Norepinephrine and epinephrine were unchanged. Elevated diuresis and natriuresis were evident during the first day of HDT. However, renal excretory patterns were different between the two groups: indeed, a decrease of Na+, ANP and cGMP was observed only in No-CM at Day 13 during HDT. Our data showed that the subjects of the No-CM group experienced a greater increase in heart rate and a decrease in systolic blood pressure during tilt tests after HDT; nevertheless, after HDT, blood pressure was better maintained in CM group during the tilt test. The plasma volume decrease measured at the end of HDT was significantly lower in CM group, in contrast, these countermeasures were ineffective in preventing at least certain changes in blood volume regulating hormones.  相似文献   

8.
We hypothesized that sleep restriction (4 consecutive nights, 4 h sleep/night) attenuates orthostatic tolerance. The effect of sleep restriction on cardiovascular responses to simulated orthostasis, arterial baroreflex gain, and heart rate variability was evaluated in 10 healthy volunteers. Arterial baroreflex gain was determined from heart rate responses to nitroprusside-phenylephrine injections, and orthostatic tolerance was tested via lower body negative pressure (LBNP). A Finapres device measured finger arterial pressure. No difference in baroreflex function, heart rate variability, or LBNP tolerance was observed with sleep restriction (P > 0.3). Systolic pressure was greater at -60 mmHg LBNP after sleep restriction than before sleep restriction (110 +/- 6 and 124 +/- 3 mmHg before and after sleep restriction, respectively, P = 0.038), whereas heart rate decreased (108 +/- 8 and 99 +/- 8 beats/min before and after sleep restriction, respectively, P = 0.028). These data demonstrate that sleep restriction produces subtle changes in cardiovascular responses to simulated orthostasis, but these changes do not compromise orthostatic tolerance.  相似文献   

9.
This study tested the hypothesis that reduction in cerebral blood flow (CBF) during orthostatic stress after bed rest can be ameliorated with volume loading, exercise, or both. Transcranial Doppler was used to measure changes in CBF velocity during lower body negative pressure (LBNP) before and after an 18-day bed rest in 33 healthy subjects. Subjects were assigned into four groups with similar age and sex: 1) supine cycling during bed rest (Exercise group; n = 7), 2) volume loading with Dextran infusion after bed rest to restore reduced left ventricular filling pressure (Dextran group; n = 7), 3) exercise combined with volume loading to prevent orthostatic intolerance (Ex-Dex group; n = 7), and 4) a control group (n = 12). LBNP tolerance was measured using a cumulative stress index (CSI). After bed rest, CBF velocity was reduced at a lower level of LBNP in the Control group, and the magnitude of reduction was greater in the Ex-Dex group. However, reduction in orthostatic tolerance was prevented in the Ex-Dex group. Notably, volume loading alone prevented greater reductions in CBF velocity after bed rest, but CSI was reduced still by 25%. Finally, decreases in CBF velocity during LBNP were correlated with reduction in cardiac output under all conditions (r(2) = 0.86; P = < 0.001). Taken together, these findings demonstrate that volume loading alone can ameliorate reductions in CBF during LBNP. However, the lack of associations between changes in CBF velocity and orthostatic tolerance suggests that reductions in CBF during LBNP under steady-state conditions by itself are unlikely to be a primary factor leading to orthostatic intolerance.  相似文献   

10.
The first objective was to assess the left ventricle function at rest, at the end of a short term (4 days) HDT, and at the end of a long term (6 weeks) HDT. The second objective was to check if these short and long HDT induced any abnormal cardiac hemodynamic response to LBNP (lower body negative pressure) test that could be related to orthostatic intolerance.  相似文献   

11.
In this article, we intentionally present exclusively the results of our recent studies of arterial and venous hemodynamics as predictors of human orthostatic tolerance during space flight and after the return to Earth. The possibility of in-flight orthostatic tolerance prediction by arterial hemodynamic responses to the lower body negative pressure (LBNP) and venous hemodynamic changes in response to occlusion of the lower extremities is demonstrated. For the first time, three levels of cerebral blood flow deficits during the determination of orthostatic tolerance in the course of the LBNP test performed in microgravity. We offer quantitative arguments for the dependence of the cerebral blood flow deficit on the degree of tolerance of the LBNP test. Patterns of arterial hemodynamics during LBNP were successfully used to diagnose the actual orthostatic tolerance and to follow its trend during flight, which testifies to the possibility of predicting orthostatic tolerance changes in an individual cosmonaut during space flight. Occlusion plethysmography of the legs revealed three levels of response of the most informative venous parameters (capacity, distensibility, and rate of filling) of the lower extremities correlated to the severity of decrease in orthostatic tolerance.  相似文献   

12.
Previous studies suggest that skin surface cooling (SSC) preserves orthostatic tolerance; however, this hypothesis has not been experimentally tested. Thus the purpose of this project was to identify whether SSC improves orthostatic tolerance in otherwise normothermic individuals. Eight subjects underwent two presyncope limited graded lower-body negative pressure (LBNP) tolerance tests. On different days, and randomly assigned, LBNP tolerance was assessed under control conditions and during SSC (perfused 16 degrees C water through tube-lined suit worn by each subject). Orthostatic tolerance was significantly elevated in each individual due to SSC, as evidenced by a significant increase in a standardized cumulative stress index (normothermia 564 +/- 58 mmHg.min; SSC 752 +/- 58 mmHg.min; P < 0.05). At most levels of LBNP, blood pressure during the SSC tolerance test was significantly greater than during the control test. Furthermore, the reduction in cerebral blood flow velocity was attenuated during some of the early stages of LBNP for the SSC trial. Plasma norepinephrine concentrations were significantly higher during LBNP with SSC, suggesting that SSC may improve orthostatic tolerance through increased sympathetic activity. These data demonstrate that SSC is effective in improving orthostatic tolerance in otherwise normothermic individuals.  相似文献   

13.
Check if the stimulation of the leg muscles and neuro-sensorial system during stand test influence the cardiovascular response to stand test pre and post a 7 d HDT (4 subjects). Methods: After 20 min supine, the subject stood for 10 min, and closed the eyes for 1 min. Then he stayed 2 min stand up on ant-posterior or lateral unstable platform and closed the eyes for 30 sec. The cerebral and lower limb flow were assessed by Doppler (skin fixed sensors) and also the cerebral to femoral flow ratio (CFR). Results: All 4 subjects were tolerant, CFR increased similarly pre and post HDT. Post HDT eye closing increased leg muscle activity, and femoral flow increased more than pre HDT, on ant-post unstable platform. The trace of the body foot pressure point was much longer post HDT on the ant-post platform. Conclusion: Post HDT neuro-sensorial disadaptation may contribute to reduce the orthostatic tolerance at least in absence of visual references.  相似文献   

14.
This study was undertaken to identify combinations ('neutral points', NP) of orthostatic (tilt: head-down = HDT, head-up = HUT) and pseudo-orthostatic (lower body pressure: positive = LBPP, negative = LBNP) stimuli able to compensate one another in their effect on hemodynamic variables, electrical thoracic impedance (TI), hematocrit and plasma mass density (PD), and blood hormone concentrations. We asked if NP's exist for tested variables (hypothesis 1), if NP's differ with variables (hypothesis 2), and if NP's change as a function of time (hypothesis 3). For the blood volume sensitive variables (PD, plasma total protein concentration, and hematocrit) we found a NP at > or = 30 degrees HDT at LBNP-35 and -15 degrees HUT with LBPP+35. There was no clear PD / total plasma protein concentration effect with various degrees of LBNP-15 / HDT. NP's could be derived for some hemodynamic variables: With LBNP-35, a NP for heart rate was derived at -25 degrees HDT and for MAP at -30 degrees HDT. Heart rate intersected at > or = 30 degrees HDT with LBNP-15 (extrapolated), stroke volume index (SVI) at -20 degrees HDT. With LBPP+35, SVI had its NP at 11 degrees HUT. The hormonal responses displayed a pattern where plasma renin activity (PRA) NP's were logically scattered with LBNP intensity, whereas aldosterone displayed similar NP's with both LBNP intensities.  相似文献   

15.
Women have a greater incidence of orthostatic intolerance than men. We hypothesized that this difference is related to hemodynamic effects on regulation of cardiac filling rather than to reduced responsiveness of vascular resistance during orthostatic stress. We constructed Frank-Starling curves from pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP), stroke volume (SV), and stroke index (SI) during lower body negative pressure (LBNP) and saline infusion in 10 healthy young women and 13 men. Orthostatic tolerance was determined by progressive LBNP to presyncope. LBNP tolerance was significantly lower in women than in men (626.8 +/- 55.0 vs. 927.7 +/- 53.0 mmHg x min, P < 0.01). Women had steeper maximal slopes of Starling curves than men whether expressed as SV (12.5 +/- 2.0 vs. 7.1 +/- 1.5 ml/mmHg, P < 0.05) or normalized as SI (6.31 +/- 0.8 vs. 4.29 +/- 0.6 ml.m-2.mmHg-1, P < 0.05). During progressive LBNP, PCWP dropped quickly at low levels, and reached a plateau at high levels of LBNP near presyncope in all subjects. SV was 35% and SI was 29% lower in women at presyncope (both P < 0.05). Coincident with the smaller SV, women had higher heart rates but similar mean arterial pressures compared with men at presyncope. Vascular resistance and plasma norepinephrine concentration were similar between genders. We conclude that lower orthostatic tolerance in women is associated with decreased cardiac filling rather than reduced responsiveness of vascular resistance during orthostatic challenges. Thus cardiac mechanics and Frank-Starling relationship may be important mechanisms underlying the gender difference in orthostatic tolerance.  相似文献   

16.
Exposure to LBNP results in body fluid shift to lower extremities similarly as under influence of orthostatic stress. In susceptible persons it leads to syncope. For better understanding why certain individuals are more susceptible to orthostatic challenges it seemed necessary to collect more data on hemodynamic and neuroendocrine adjustments occurring before onset of presyncopal symptoms Accordingly, in this study heart rate (HR), blood pressure (BP), stroke volume (SV), cardiac output (CO), hematocrit, plasma catecholamines, adrenomedullin, ACTH and plasma renin activity (PRA) were measured in 24 healthy men during graded LBNP (-15, -30 and -50 mmHg). Thirteen subjects completed the test (HT group) whereas 11 had presyncope signs or symptoms at -30 mmHg or at the beginning of -50 mmHg (LT group). Comparison of these groups showed that LT subjects had lower baseline total peripheral resistance and higher plasma adrenomedullin. During LBNP plasma catecholamine and PRA increases were even greater in LT than in HT group while plasma adrenomedullin elevations were similar in both groups. Plasma ACTH increased only in LT group following presyncope symptoms. Low tolerant group showed more rapid decline of SV and CO than HT subjects from the beginning of LBNP. It is suggested that measurements of SV at the level of LBNP which did not evoke any adverse symptoms may be of predictive value for lower orthostatic tolerance.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Lower body negative pressure (LBNP) has been extensively used for decades in aerospace physiological research as a tool to investigate cardiovascular mechanisms that are associated with or underlie performance in aerospace and military environments. In comparison with clinical stand and tilt tests, LBNP represents a relatively safe methodology for inducing highly reproducible hemodynamic responses during exposure to footward fluid shifts similar to those experienced under orthostatic challenge. By maintaining an orthostatic challenge in a supine posture, removal of leg support (muscle pump) and head motion (vestibular stimuli) during LBNP provides the capability to isolate cardiovascular mechanisms that regulate blood pressure. LBNP can be used for physiological measurements, clinical diagnoses and investigational research comparisons of subject populations and alterations in physiological status. The applications of LBNP to the study of blood pressure regulation in spaceflight, groundbased simulations of low gravity, and hemorrhage have provided unique insights and understanding for development of countermeasures based on physiological mechanisms underlying the operational problems.  相似文献   

19.
Influence of Desmopressin, a synthetic analog of antidiuretic hormone (ADH), on the water-salt metabolism and orthostatic tolerance in humans during head-down tilting (HDT 15°) for 24 h has been studied. Smaller decrease in the total body water and extracellular fluid content, suppression of diuresis, and positive water balance were observed after Desmopressin administration as compared to the control group (without ADH). At the same time, the tolerance of the standard orthostatic test is increased. Thus, Desmopressin has been shown to prevent hypohydration of the body under the HDT conditions and, hence, an increase of orthostatic tolerance.  相似文献   

20.
Bed rest reduces orthostatic tolerance. Despite decades of study, the cause of this phenomenon remains unclear. In this report we examined hemodynamic and sympathetic nerve responses to graded lower body negative pressure (LBNP) before and after 24 h of bed rest. LBNP allows for baroreceptor disengagement in a graded fashion. We measured heart rate (HR), cardiac output (HR x stroke volume obtained by echo Doppler), and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) during a progressive and graded LBNP paradigm. Negative pressure was increased by 10 mmHg every 3 min until presyncope or completion of -60 mmHg. After bed rest, LBNP tolerance was reduced in 11 of 13 subjects (P <.023), HR was greater (P <.002), cardiac output was unchanged, and the ability to augment MSNA at high levels of LBNP was reduced (rate of rise for 30- to 60-mmHg LBNP before bed rest 0.073 bursts x min(-1) x mmHg(-1); after bed rest 0.035 bursts x min(-1) x mmHg(-1); P < 0.016). These findings suggest that 24 h of bed rest reduces sympathetic nerve responses to LBNP.  相似文献   

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