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1.
Head-down bed rest at an angle of 6 degrees was used as an experimental model to simulate the hemodynamic effects of microgravity, i.e., the shift of fluids from the lower to the upper part of the body. The sympathoadrenal activity during acute (from 0.5 to 10 h) and prolonged (4 days) head-down bed rest was assessed in eight healthy men (24 +/- 1 yr) by measuring epinephrine (E), norepinephrine (NE), dopamine (DA), and methoxylated metabolite levels in their plasma and urine. Catecholamine (CA) and methoxyamine levels were essentially unaltered at any time of bed rest. Maximal changes in plasma were on the second day (D2): NE, 547 +/- 84 vs. 384 +/- 55 pg/ml; DA, 192 +/- 32 vs. 141 +/- 16 pg/ml; NS. After 24 h of bed rest, heart rate decreased from 71 +/- 1 to 63 +/- 3/min (P less than 0.01). Daily dynamic leg exercise [50% maximum O2 uptake (VO2 max)] used as a countermeasure did not alter the pattern of plasma CA during bed rest but resulted in a higher urinary NE excretion during postexercise recovery (+45% on D2; P less than 0.05). The data indicate no evident relationship between sympathoadrenal function and stimulation of cardiopulmonary receptors or neuroendocrine changes induced by central hypervolemia during head-down bed rest.  相似文献   

2.
Rigorous bed rest (RBR) induces significant electrolyte changes, but little it is not known about the effect of acute bed rest (ABR) (i.e., abrupt confinement to a RBR). The aim of this study was to measure urinary and plasma electrolyte changes during ABR and RBR conditions. The studies were done during 3 d of a pre-bed-rest (BR) period and during 7 d of an ABR and RBR period. Thirty male trained athletes aged, 24.4 ± 6.6 yr were chosen as subjects. They were divided equally into three groups: unrestricted ambulatory control subjects (UACS), acute-bed-rested subjects (ABRS), and rigorous-bed-rested subjects (RBRS). The UACS group experienced no changes in professional training and daily activities. The ABRS were submitted abruptly to a RBR regimen and without having any prior knowledge of the exact date and time when they would be subjected to an RBR regimen. The RBRS were subjected to an RBR regime on a predetermined date and time known to them from the beginning of the study. Sodium (Na), potassium (K), magnesium (Mg), calcium (Ca), and phosphate (P) in plasma and urine, plasma renin activity (PRA) and plasma aldosterone (PA), physical characteristics, peak oxygen uptake, and food and water intakes were measured. Urinary Na, K, Ca, Mg, and P excretion and plasma Na, K, Mg, Ca, and P concentration, PRA, and PA concentration increased significantly (p ≤ 0.01), whereas body weight, peak oxygen uptake, and food and water intakes decreased significantly in the ABRS and RBRS groups when compared with the UACS group. However, urinary and plasma Na, K, Mg, P, and Ca, PRA, and PA values increased much faster and were much greater in the ABRS group than in the RBRS group. Plasma and urinary Na, K, Ca, Mg, and P, PRA and PA levels, food and water intakes, body weight, and peak oxygen uptake did not change significantly in the UACS group when compared with its baseline control values. It was shown that RBR and ABR conditions induce significant increases in urinary and plasma electrolytes; however, urinary and plasma electrolyte changes appeared much faster and were much greater in the ABRS group than the RBRS group. It was concluded that the more abruptly motor activity is ended, the faster and the greater the urinary and plasma electrolyte change.  相似文献   

3.
We tested the hypothesis that encouraged water drinking according to urine output for 20 days could ameliorate impaired thermoregulatory function under microgravity conditions. Twelve healthy men, aged 24 ± 1.5 years (mean ± SE), underwent −6° head-down bed rest (HDBR) for 20 days. During bed rest, subjects were encouraged to drink the same amount of water as the 24-h urine output volume of the previous day. A heat exposure test consisting of water immersion up to the knees at 42°C for 45 min after a 10 min rest (baseline) in the sitting position was performed 2 days before the 20-day HDBR (PRE), and 2 days after the 20-day HDBR (POST). Core temperature (tympanic), skin temperature, skin blood flow and sweat rate were recorded continuously. We found that the −6° HDBR did not increase the threshold temperature for onset of sweating under the encouraged water drinking regime. We conclude that encouraged water drinking could prevent impaired thermoregulatory responses after HDBR.  相似文献   

4.
Whole body vibration with resistive exercise is a promising countermeasure against some weightlessness-induced dysfunctions. Our objective was to study whether the combination of low-magnitude whole body vibration with a resistive exercise can prevent the cardiovascular deconditioning induced by a nonstrict 60-day head-down bed rest (Earth Star International Bed Rest Experiment Project). Fourteen healthy men participated in this study. We recorded electrocardiograms and blood pressure waves by means of a noninvasive beat-by-beat measurement system (Cardiospace, integrated by Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales and Astronaut Center of China) during an orthostatic test (20 min of 75-degree head-up tilt test) before and immediately after bed rest. We estimated heart rate, blood pressure, cardiac output, stroke volume, total peripheral resistance, baroreflex sensitivity, and heart rate variability. Low-magnitude whole body vibration with resistive exercise prevented an increase of the sympathetic index (reflecting the sympathovagal balance of cardiac autonomic control) and limited the decrease of the spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity induced by 60 days of head-down bed rest. However, this countermeasure had very little effect on cardiac hemodynamics and did not improve the orthostatic tolerance. This combined countermeasure did not efficiently prevent orthostatic intolerance but prevents changes in the autonomic nervous system associated with cardiovascular deconditioning. The underlying mechanisms remain hypothetical but might involve cutaneous and muscular mechanoreceptors.  相似文献   

5.
Eighteen patients with ischaemic heart disease were trained for 3 months, three times a week. The effectiveness of the training programme was demonstrated by increases of 27% in peak oxygen uptake and 29% in exercise duration, and by a decrease in resting and submaximal heart rates. Blood pressure, however, was not significantly affected during the training period. At rest and at submaximal exercise plasma renin activity (PRA) was lower after training. Plasma angiotensin I concentration (PA I) and angiotensin II concentration (PA II) were not significantly affected. Plasma aldosterone concentration (PAC), only measured at rest, was not significantly changed after the training period, while plasma norepinephrine (PNE) and epinephrine (PE) concentrations were significantly decreased, but only at high levels of exercise. A reduced sympathetic tone after training, suggested by the lower heart rates and the tendency to a decrease in PNE, is a likely explanation for the decrease in PRA. However, despite this decrease, PA I, PA II, and PAC were not significantly changed after training; the reason for this disrepancy is unknown.  相似文献   

6.
Four women were studied at 0400 h and 1600 h to determine if their hormonal and hemodynamic responses to exercise varied with the circadian cycle. Esophageal temperature was measured during rest and exercise (60% peak VO2; 30 min) in a warm room (Ta = 35 degrees C; PH2O = 1.7 kPa). Venous blood samples were drawn during rest and exercise and hemoglobin concentration (Hb), hematocrit (Hct), plasma osmolality (Posm), plasma protein concentration (Pp), colloid osmotic pressure (COP), plasma renin activity (PRA), cortisol, aldosterone, norepinephrine (NE) and epinephrine (E) were determined. Changes in plasma volume (PV) were estimated from changes in Hb and Hct. The relative hemoconcentration (-11.2%) was similar at 0400 h and 1600 h, but the absolute PV was smaller at 1600 h than at 0400 h (p = 0.03). The responses of Posm, Pp and COP to exercise were unaffected by time of day. Although PRA was not different at the two times of day, PRA was 244% greater during exercise at 1600 h, but only 103% greater during exercise at 0400 h. The normal circadian rhythms in plasma aldosterone (p = 0.043) and plasma cortisol (p = 0.004) were observed. Plasma aldosterone was 57% greater during exercise, while plasma cortisol did not change. The change in E and NE was greater at 0400 h, but this was due to the lower resting values of the catecholamines at 0400 h. These data indicate that time of day generally did not affect the hormonal or hemodynamic responses to exercise, with the exception that PRA was markedly higher during exercise at 1600 h compared to 0400 h.  相似文献   

7.
The psychological condition of astronauts is an important factor for ensuring mission success in limited space. Head-down tilting bed rest is a well-accepted method by which to simulate an acute stage of human adaptation to the weightless state in space flight. In our previous studies, the enhancement of depressive and neurotic levels occurred during a 20-day horizontal bed rest. In this study, we attempted to examine the depressive and neurotic levels, the mood status, and behavioral tendency of the subjects and to analyze the changes of 24-hour urinary excretion of 17-hydroxycorticosteroid-glucronides (17-OHCS) for an indicator of changes in the endocrine system due to physical and psychological stress during a 20-day 6-degrees head-down tilting bed rest (BR).  相似文献   

8.
The initial response to bed rest involves an increase in central blood volume leading to a an enhanced renal excretion of fluid and electrolytes. Within 24 hours of head-down bed rest a new steady state condition occurs with a sustained reduction of plasma volume, extracellular fluid volume, total body water, and body weight. It was the purpose of the present study to elucidate the volume homeostatic mechanisms during head-down bed rest by investigating the endocrine and renal responses to a load of sodium chloride given as either an isotonic or a hypertonic solution.  相似文献   

9.
We hypothesized that performanceof exercise during heart failure (HF) would lead to hypoperfusion ofactive skeletal muscles, causing sympathoactivation at lower workloadsand alteration of the normal hemodynamic and hormonal responses. Wemeasured cardiac output, mean aortic and right atrial pressures,hindlimb and renal blood flow (RBF), arterial plasma norepinephrine(NE), plasma renin activity (PRA), and plasma arginine vasopressin(AVP) in seven dogs during graded treadmill exercises and at rest. Incontrol experiments, sympathetic activation at the higher workloadsresulted in increased cardiac performance that matched the increasedmuscle vascular conductance. There were also increases in NE, PRA, and AVP. Renal vascular conductance decreased during exercise, such thatRBF remained at resting levels. After control experiments, HF wasinduced by rapid ventricular pacing, and the exercise protocols wererepeated. At rest in HF, cardiac performance was significantly depressed and caused lower mean arterial pressure, despite increased HR. Neurohumoral activation was evidenced by renal and hindlimb vasoconstriction and by elevated NE, PRA, and AVP levels, but it didnot increase at the mildest workload. Beyond mild exercise, sympathoactivation increased, accompanied by progressive renal vasoconstriction, a fall in RBF, and very large increases of NE, PRA,and AVP. As exercise intensity increased, peripheral vasoconstriction increased, causing arterial pressure to rise to near normal levels, despite depressed cardiac output. However, combined with redirection ofRBF, this did not correct the perfusion deficit to the hindlimbs. Weconclude that, in dogs with HF, the elevated sympathetic activity observed at rest is not exacerbated by mild exercise. However, withheavier workloads, sympathoactivation begins at lower workloads andbecomes progressively exaggerated at higher workloads, thus alteringdistribution of blood flow.

  相似文献   

10.
Adaptation to microgravity is associated with alteration in some endocrine functions. In the present longitudinal study, the counterregulatory hormonal response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia (ITT, 0.1 IU/kg short acting insulin i. v.) was evaluated under simulated microgravity conditions in 15 physically fit subjects. ITT was performed at the beginning of the investigation, and again after completion of 6 weeks of endurance training and after a subsequent period of 4 days of head-down bed rest at a backward tilt of 6 degrees from the horizontal. Endurance training showed a significant increase in maximal aerobic capacity in previously well-trained subjects (increase by 12 %), as well as on attenuation of counterregulatory response of epinephrine to hypoglycemia. After 4 days of bed rest, basal concentrations of plasma norepinephrine was diminished (p < 0.002) and plasma renin activity was enhanced (p < 0.02). After bed rest, decreased responses of the two catecholamines (norepinephrine, p < 0.001; epinephrine, p < 0.001), growth hormone (p < 0.001), and cortisol (p < 0.05) were observed. Response of plasma renin activity after bed rest was increased (p < 0.01). This longitudinal study indicated that 4 days of bed rest in endurance-trained subjects induced increased response of PRA to hypoglycemia and attenuation of other counterregulatory neuroendocrine responses.  相似文献   

11.
Head-down bed rest changes the values of many cardiovascular and endocrine variables and also elicits significant hypovolemia. Because previous studies had not controlled for hypovolemia, it is unknown whether the reported changes were primary effects of bed rest or secondary effects of bed rest-induced hypovolemia. We hypothesized that restoring plasma volume with salt tablets and water after 12 days of head-down bed rest would result in an absence of hemodynamic and endocrine changes and a reduced incidence of orthostatic hypotension. In 10 men, we measured changes from pre-bed-rest to post-bed-rest in venous and arterial pressures; heart rate; stroke volume; cardiac output; vascular resistance; plasma norepinephrine, epinephrine, vasopressin, renin activity (PRA), and aldosterone responses to different tilt levels (0 degrees, -10 degrees, 20 degrees, 30 degrees, and 70 degrees); and plasma volume and platelet alpha2- and lymphocyte beta2-adrenoreceptor densities and affinities (0 degrees tilt only). Fluid loading at the end of bed rest restored plasma volume and resulted in the absence of post-bed-rest orthostatic hypotension and changes in supine hemodynamic and endocrine variables. Fluid loading did not prevent post-bed-rest increases in beta2-adrenoreceptor density or decreases in the aldosterone-to-PRA ratio (P = 0.05 for each). Heart rate, epinephrine, and PRA responses to upright tilt after bed rest were increased (P < 0.05), despite the fluid load. These results suggest that incidents of orthostatic hypotension and many of the changes in supine hemodynamic and endocrine variables in volume-depleted bed-rested subjects occur secondarily to the hypovolemia. Despite normovolemia after bed rest, beta2-adrenoreceptors were upregulated, and heart rate, epinephrine, and PRA responses to tilt were augmented, indicating that these changes are independent of volume depletion.  相似文献   

12.
Plasma renin system during exercise in normal men   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The exercise-related increase in plasma renin activity (PRA) and in the plasma concentration of angiotensin II (ANG II) and aldosterone (Aldo) was studied in 43 healthy volunteers whose 24-h urinary sodium excretion (UVNa) ranged from 10 to 250 mmol. Arterial blood samples were obtained at rest and during bicycle ergometry. Compared with rest, PRA, ANG II, and Aldo rose to a similar extent during light and moderate exercise. However, at peak exercise ANG II increased significantly more (P less than 0.001) than PRA and Aldo. Thus, with increasing intensity of exercise, the slope of the linear regression of ANG II on PRA became significantly (P less than 0.001) steeper, whereas at maximal exercise the Aldo response did not follow the acute rise in ANG II. At rest as well as during exercise, Aldo rose with increasing ANG II, but the stimulatory effect of ANG II on Aldo was attenuated with higher sodium intake, as estimated from UVNa. Finally, independent of the level of physical activity, UVNa was negatively correlated with PRA, ANG II, and Aldo.  相似文献   

13.
Although spaceflight and bed rest are known to cause muscular atrophy in the antigravity muscles of the legs, the changes in sympathetic and cardiovascular responses to exercises using the atrophied muscles remain unknown. We hypothesized that bed rest would augment sympathetic responses to isometric exercise using antigravity leg muscles in humans. Ten healthy male volunteers were subjected to 14-day 6 degrees head-down bed rest. Before and after bed rest, they performed isometric exercises using leg (plantar flexion) and forearm (handgrip) muscles, followed by 2-min postexercise muscle ischemia (PEMI) that continues to stimulate the muscle metaboreflex. These exercises were sustained to fatigue. We measured muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) in the contralateral resting leg by microneurography. In both pre- and post-bed-rest exercise tests, exercise intensities were set at 30 and 70% of the maximum voluntary force measured before bed rest. Bed rest attenuated the increase in MSNA in response to fatiguing plantar flexion by approximately 70% at both exercise intensities (both P < 0.05 vs. before bed rest) and reduced the maximal voluntary force of plantar flexion by 15%. In contrast, bed rest did not alter the increase in MSNA response to fatiguing handgrip and had no effects on the maximal voluntary force of handgrip. Although PEMI sustained MSNA activation before bed rest in all trials, bed rest entirely eliminated the PEMI-induced increase in MSNA in leg exercises but partially attenuated it in forearm exercises. These results do not support our hypothesis but indicate that bed rest causes a reduction in isometric exercise-induced sympathetic activation in (probably atrophied) antigravity leg muscles.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
To assess the effect of continuous heat exposure on the nocturnal patterns of renin, aldosterone, adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), and cortisol, six young men were exposed to thermoneutral environment for 5 days, followed by a 5-day acclimation period in a hot dry environment (35 degrees C). Blood was collected at 10-min intervals during the second night at thermoneutrality (N0) and during the first (N1) and the last (N5) nights of heat exposure. Polygraphic recordings of sleep were scored according to established criteria. Continuous heat exposure led to progressive decreases in the 24-h urinary volume and in Na excretion, whereas urinary osmolality increased. After 5 days of uninterrupted heat, significant increases were found in plasma volume (P less than 0.05), osmolality (P less than 0.01), plasma Na (P less than 0.01), and protein levels (P less than 0.05). Sweat gland output increased during the first 3 days and then declined without any concomitant increases in body temperature. Compared with N0, there were no differences in plasma renin activity (PRA) and aldosterone (PA) profiles during N1 at 35 degrees C. However, during N5 the mean PRA and PA levels were significantly (P less than 0.05) enhanced, and their nocturnal oscillations were amplified (P less than 0.05). This amplification occurred mainly in the second part of the night when regular rapid-eye-movement and non-rapid-eye-movement sleep cycles were observed, leading to a general upward trend in the nocturnal profiles. The relationship between the nocturnal PRA oscillations and the sleep cycles was not modified. ACTH and cortisol patterns were not affected by continuous heat exposure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
This study assessed the effects of inactivity on GLUT-4 content of human skeletal muscle and evaluated resistance training as a countermeasure to inactivity-related changes in GLUT-4 content in skeletal muscle. Nine young men participated in the study. For 19 days, four control subjects remained in a -6 degrees head-down tilt at all times throughout bed rest, except for showering every other day. Five training group subjects also remained at bed rest, except during resistance training once in the morning. The resistance training consisted of 30 isometric maximal voluntary contractions for 3 s each; leg-press exercise was used to recruit the extensor muscles of the ankle, knee, and hip. Pauses (3 s) were allowed between bouts of maximal contraction. Muscle biopsy samples were obtained from the lateral aspect of vastus lateralis (VL) muscle before and after the bed rest. GLUT-4 content in VL muscle of the control group was significantly decreased after bed rest (473 +/- 48 vs. 398 +/- 66 counts. min-1. microgram membrane protein-1, before and after bed rest, respectively), whereas GLUT-4 significantly increased in the training group with bed rest (510 +/- 158 vs. 663 +/- 189 counts. min-1. microgram membrane protein-1, before and after bed rest, respectively). The present study demonstrated that GLUT-4 in VL muscle decreased by approximately 16% after 19 days of bed rest, and isometric resistance training during bed rest induced a 30% increase above the value of GLUT-4 before bed rest.  相似文献   

17.
Twelve male runners and 12 matched nonathletes performed a prolonged uninterrupted graded exercise test on the bicycle ergometer up to exhaustion to study blood pressure and plasma levels of renin (PRA), vasoconstrictor angiotensin II (ANG II), and 6-ketoprostaglandin F1 alpha (6-keto-PGF1 alpha), a metabolite of the vasodilator prostacyclin. In the athletes work load was increased by 30 W/4 min, and in the control subjects the increments of work load were adjusted to their lower exercise capacity to equalize total exercise duration. Blood was drawn, and blood pressure and O2 uptake (VO2) were measured at rest and at the fourth, eighth, and last steps of exercise. Peak VO2 averaged 60 +/- 1.6 ml . min-1 . kg-1 in the runners and 46.8 +/- 1.5 in the nonathletes. To evaluate differences between athletes and controls, PRA, ANG II, and 6-keto-PGF1 alpha were first adjusted for significant confounding factors, such as age, weight, hematocrit, 24-h urinary sodium excretion, and O2 uptake. PRA was significantly lower in the athletes (F = 11.2; P less than 0.01); ANG II was not different at rest, but its rise with exercise was less steep in the runners (F = 8.2; P less than 0.01), whereas 6-keto-PGF1 alpha was not different between the groups (F = 1.3; NS). Despite the differences in PRA and ANG II, however, blood pressure was similar in athletes and nonathletes (F = 0.0; NS).  相似文献   

18.
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   

19.
The renin-aldosterone system may be depressed in subjects exercising at high altitude, thereby preventing excessive angiotensin I (ANG I) and aldosterone levels, which could favor the onset of acute mountain sickness. The role of beta-adrenoceptors in hormonal responses to hypoxia was investigated in 12 subjects treated with a nonselective beta-blocker, pindolol. The subjects performed a standardized maximal bicycle ergometer exercise with (P) and without (C) acute pindolol treatment (15 mg/day) at sea level, as well as during a 5-day period at high altitude (4,350 m, barometric pressure 450 mmHg). During sea-level exercise, pindolol caused a reduction in plasma renin activity (PRA, 2.83 +/- 0.35 vs. 5.13 +/- 0.7 ng ANG I.ml-1.h-1, P less than 0.01), an increase in plasma alpha-atrial natriuretic factor (alpha-ANF) level (23.1 +/- 2.9 (P) vs. 10.4 +/- 1.5 (C) pmol/1, P less than 0.01), and no change in plasma aldosterone concentration [0.50 +/- 0.04 (P) vs. 0.53 +/- 0.03 (C) nmol/1]. Compared with sea-level values, PRA (3.45 +/- 0.7 ng ANG I.ml-1.h-1) and PA (0.39 +/- 0.03 nmol/1) were significantly lower (P less than 0.05) during exercise at high altitude. alpha-ANF was not affected by hypoxia. When beta-blockade was achieved at high altitude, exercise-induced elevation in PRA was completely abolished, but no additional decline in PA occurred. Plasma norepinephrine and epinephrine concentrations tended to be lower during maximal exercise at altitude; however, these differences were not statistically significant. Our results provide further evidence that hypoxia has a suppressive effect on the renin-aldosterone system. However, beta-adrenergic mechanisms do not appear to be responsible for inhibition of renin secretion at high altitude.  相似文献   

20.
Prolonged bed rest may cause changes in the autonomic nervous system that are related to cognition and emotion. This study adopted an emotional flanker task to evaluate the effect of 45 days -6° head-down bed rest (HDBR) on executive functioning in 16 healthy young men at each of six time points: the second-to-last day before the bed rest period, the eleventh, twentieth, thirty-second and fortieth day during the bed rest period, and the eighth day after the bed rest period. In addition, self-report inventories (Beck Anxiety Inventory, BAI; Beck Depression Inventory, BDI; Positive Affect and Negative Affect Scale, PANAS) were conducted to record emotional changes, and the participants’ galvanic skin response (GSR), heart rate (HR) and heart rate variability (HRV) were assessed as measures of physiological activity. The results showed that the participants’ reaction time on the flanker task increased significantly relative to their responses on the second-to-last day before the period of bed rest, their galvanic skin response weakened and their degrees of positive affect declined during the bed rest period. Our results provide some evidence for a detrimental effect of prolonged bed rest on executive functioning and positive affect. Whether this stems from a lack of aerobic physical activity and/or the effect of HDBR itself remains to be determined.  相似文献   

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