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1.
Augustyniak RA Collins HL Ansorge EJ Rossi NF O'Leary DS 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2001,280(4):H1645-H1652
Previous studies have shown that in dogs performing mild to moderate treadmill exercise, partial graded reductions in hindlimb blood flow cause active skeletal muscle to become ischemic and metabolites to accumulate thus evoking the muscle metaboreflex. This leads to a substantial reflex increase in mean arterial pressure (MAP) mediated almost solely via a rise in cardiac output (CO). However, during severe exercise CO is likely near maximal and thus metaboreflex-mediated increases in MAP may be attenuated. We therefore evoked the metaboreflex via partial graded reductions in hindlimb blood flow in seven dogs during mild, moderate, and severe treadmill exercise. During mild and moderate exercise there was a large rise in CO (1.5 +/- 0.2 and 2.2 +/- 0.3 l/min, respectively), whereas during severe exercise no significant increase in CO occurred. The rise in CO caused a marked pressor response that was significantly attenuated during severe exercise (26.3 +/- 7.0, 33.2 +/- 5.6, and 12.2 +/- 4.8 mmHg, respectively). We conclude that during severe exercise the metaboreflex pressor response mechanisms are altered such that the ability of this reflex to increase CO is abolished, and reduced pressor response occurs only via peripheral vasoconstriction. This shift in mechanisms likely limits the effectiveness of the metaboreflex to increase blood flow to ischemic active skeletal muscle. Furthermore, because the metaboreflex is a flow-raising reflex and not a pressure-raising reflex, it may be most appropriate to describe the metaboreflex magnitude based on its ability to evoke a rise in CO and not a rise in MAP. 相似文献
2.
Kim JK Sala-Mercado JA Rodriguez J Scislo TJ O'Leary DS 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2005,288(3):H1374-H1380
Previous studies showed that the arterial baroreflex opposes the pressor response mediated by muscle metaboreflex activation during mild dynamic exercise. However, no studies have investigated the mechanisms contributing to metaboreflex-mediated pressor responses during dynamic exercise after arterial baroreceptor denervation. Therefore, we investigated the contribution of cardiac output (CO) and peripheral vasoconstriction in mediating the pressor response to graded reductions in hindlimb perfusion in conscious, chronically instrumented dogs before and after sinoaortic denervation (SAD) during mild and moderate exercise. In control experiments, the metaboreflex pressor responses were mediated via increases in CO. After SAD, the metaboreflex pressor responses were significantly greater and significantly smaller increases in CO occurred. During control experiments, nonischemic vascular conductance (NIVC) did not change with muscle metaboreflex activation, whereas after SAD NIVC significantly decreased with metaboreflex activation; thus SAD shifted the mechanisms of the muscle metaboreflex from mainly increases in CO to combined cardiac and peripheral vasoconstrictor responses. We conclude that the major mechanism by which the arterial baroreflex buffers the muscle metaboreflex is inhibition of metaboreflex-mediated peripheral vasoconstriction. 相似文献
3.
Kim JK Augustyniak RA Sala-Mercado JA Hammond RL Ansorge EJ Rossi NF O'Leary DS 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2004,287(4):H1682-H1688
Arterial baroreflex function is well preserved during dynamic exercise in normal subjects. In subjects with heart failure (HF), arterial baroreflex ability to regulate blood pressure is impaired at rest. However, whether exercise modifies the strength and mechanisms of baroreflex responses in HF is unknown. Therefore, we investigated the relative roles of cardiac output and peripheral vasoconstriction in eliciting the pressor response to bilateral carotid occlusion (BCO) in conscious, chronically instrumented dogs at rest and during treadmill exercise ranging from mild to heavy workloads. Experiments were performed in the same animals before and after rapid ventricular pacing-induced HF. At rest, the pressor response to BCO was significantly attenuated in HF (33.3 +/- 1.2 vs. 18.7 +/- 2.7 mmHg), and this difference persisted during exercise in part due to lower cardiac output responses in HF. However, both before and after the induction of HF, the contribution of vasoconstriction in active skeletal muscle toward the pressor response became progressively greater as workload increased. We conclude that, although there is an impaired ability of the baroreflex to regulate arterial pressure at rest and during exercise in HF, vasoconstriction in active skeletal muscle becomes progressively more important in mediating the baroreflex pressor response as workload increases with a pattern similar to that observed in normal subjects. 相似文献
4.
Sala-Mercado JA Hammond RL Kim JK McDonald PJ Stephenson LW O'Leary DS 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2007,292(5):H2159-H2166
Underperfusion of active skeletal muscle elicits a reflex pressor response termed the muscle metaboreflex (MMR). In normal dogs during mild exercise, MMR activation causes large increases in cardiac output (CO) and mean arterial pressure (MAP); however, in heart failure (HF) although MAP increases, the rise in CO is virtually abolished, which may be due to an impaired ability to increase left ventricular contractility (LVC). The objective of the present study was to determine whether the increases in LVC seen with MMR activation during dynamic exercise in normal animals are abolished in HF. Conscious dogs were chronically instrumented to measure CO, MAP, and left ventricular (LV) pressure and volume. LVC was calculated from pressure-volume loop analysis [LV maximal elastance (E(max)) and preload-recruitable stroke work (PRSW)] at rest and during mild and moderate exercise under free-flow conditions and with MMR activation (via partial occlusion of hindlimb blood flow) before and after rapid ventricular pacing-induced HF. In control experiments, MMR activation at both workloads [mild exercise (3.2 km/h) and moderate exercise (6.4 km/h at 10% grade)] significantly increased CO, E(max), and PRSW. In contrast, after HF was induced, CO, E(max), and PRSW were significantly lower at rest. Although CO increased significantly from rest to exercise, E(max) and PRSW did not change. In addition, MMR activation caused no significant change in CO, E(max), or PRSW at either workload. We conclude that MMR causes large increases in LVC in normal animals but that this ability is abolished in HF. 相似文献
5.
6.
Kim JK Sala-Mercado JA Hammond RL Rodriguez J Scislo TJ O'Leary DS 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2005,289(6):H2416-H2423
Previous studies have shown that heart failure (HF) or sinoaortic denervation (SAD) alters the strength and mechanisms of the muscle metaboreflex during dynamic exercise. However, it is still unknown to what extent SAD may modify the muscle metaboreflex in HF. Therefore, we quantified the contribution of cardiac output (CO) and peripheral vasoconstriction to metaboreflex-mediated increases in mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) in conscious, chronically instrumented dogs before and after induction of HF in both barointact and SAD conditions during mild and moderate exercise. The muscle metaboreflex was activated via partial reductions in hindlimb blood flow. After SAD, the metaboreflex pressor responses were significantly higher with respect to the barointact condition despite lower CO responses. The pressor response was significantly lower in HF after SAD but still higher than that of HF in the barointact condition. During control experiments in the barointact condition, total vascular conductance summed from all beds except the hindlimbs did not change with muscle metaboreflex activation, whereas in the SAD condition both before and after induction of HF significant vasoconstriction occurred. We conclude that SAD substantially increased the contribution of peripheral vasoconstriction to metaboreflex-induced increases in MAP, whereas in HF SAD did not markedly alter the patterns of the reflex responses, likely reflecting that in HF the ability of the arterial baroreflex to buffer metaboreflex responses is impaired. 相似文献
7.
Ischemic exercise and the muscle metaboreflex. 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
J A Cornett M D Herr K S Gray M B Smith Q X Yang L I Sinoway 《Journal of applied physiology》2000,89(4):1432-1436
In exercising muscle, interstitial metabolites accumulate and stimulate muscle afferents. This evokes the muscle metaboreflex and raises arterial blood pressure (BP). In this report, we examined the effects of tension generation on muscle metabolites and BP during ischemic forearm exercise in humans. Heart rate (HR), BP, P(i), H(2)PO(4)(-), and pH ((31)P-NMR spectroscopy) data were collected in 10 normal healthy men (age 23 +/- 1 yr) during rhythmic handgrip exercise. After baseline measurements, the subjects performed rhythmic handgrip for 2 min. At 2 min, a 250-mmHg occlusion cuff was inflated, and ischemic handgrip exercise was continued until near fatigue (Borg 19). Measurements were continued for an additional 30 s of ischemia. This protocol was performed at 15, 30, 45, and 60% of the subjects' maximum voluntary contraction (MVC) in random order. As tension increased, the time to fatigue decreased. In addition, mean arterial pressure and HR were higher at 60% MVC than at any of the other lower tensions. The NMR data showed significantly greater increases in H(2)PO(4)(-), P(i), and H(+) at 60% than at 15 and 30% MVC. Therefore, despite the subjects working to the same perceived effort level, a greater reflex response (represented by BP and HR data) was elicited at 60% MVC than at any of the other ischemic tensions. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that, as tension increases, factors aside from insufficient blood flow contribute to the work effect on muscle metabolites and the magnitude of the reflex response. 相似文献
8.
Robert A Augustyniak Eric J Ansorge Jong-Kyung Kim Javier A Sala-Mercado Robert L Hammond Noreen F Rossi Donal S O'Leary 《Journal of applied physiology》2006,101(1):14-22
Rapid recovery of resting hemodynamics from tachycardia- or arrhythmia-induced heart failure (HF) has been demonstrated in both humans and animals. However, little is known about cardiovascular responses to exercise in animals or about reflex control of the cardiovascular system during exercise while recovering from HF. Inasmuch as the reduced cardiac output (CO) during exercise in HF has been shown to lead to underperfusion of active skeletal muscle and tonic activation of the muscle metaboreflex, an improved CO during exercise in subjects recovering from HF may lead to higher skeletal muscle blood flows and to relief of this metabolic stimulus. We investigated cardiovascular responses to graded treadmill exercise and metaboreflex activation [evoked by imposed graded reductions in hindlimb blood flow (HLBF) during mild and moderate exercise] in chronically instrumented dogs during control, mild to moderate HF (induced by rapid ventricular pacing), and recovery from HF. Most hemodynamic responses to graded exercise returned to control within 24 h of disconnecting the pacemaker. After 2 wk of recovery, CO and HLBF at each workload were significantly higher than control. In addition, whereas the increase in CO that normally occurs with metaboreflex activation was markedly attenuated in HF, it completely returned in the recovery experiments. We conclude that cardiovascular responses to graded exercise during the recovery from pacing-induced HF return rapidly to near or above control and that the increased CO and HLBF in recovery likely relieved the metabolic stimulus and tonic metaboreflex activation that may have occurred during moderate exercise in HF. 相似文献
9.
Altered muscle metaboreflex control of coronary blood flow and ventricular function in heart failure
Ansorge EJ Augustyniak RA Perinot ML Hammond RL Kim JK Sala-Mercado JA Rodriguez J Rossi NF O'Leary DS 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2005,288(3):H1381-H1388
We investigated the effect of muscle metaboreflex activation on left circumflex coronary blood flow (CBF), coronary vascular conductance (CVC), and regional left ventricular performance in conscious, chronically instrumented dogs during treadmill exercise before and after the induction of heart failure (HF). In control experiments, muscle metaboreflex activation during mild exercise elicited significant reflex increases in mean arterial pressure, heart rate, and cardiac output. CBF increased significantly, whereas no significant change in CVC occurred. There was no significant change in the minimal rate of myocardial shortening (-dl/dt(min)) with muscle metaboreflex activation during mild exercise (15.5 +/- 1.3 to 16.8 +/- 2.4 mm/s, P > 0.05); however, the maximal rate of myocardial relaxation (+dl/dt(max)) increased (from 26.3 +/- 4.0 to 33.7 +/- 5.7 mm/s, P < 0.05). Similar hemodynamic responses were observed with metaboreflex activation during moderate exercise, except there were significant changes in both -dl/dt(min) and dl/dt(max). In contrast, during mild exercise with metaboreflex activation during HF, no significant increase in cardiac output occurred, despite a significant increase in heart rate, inasmuch as a significant decrease in stroke volume occurred as well. The increases in mean arterial pressure and CBF were attenuated, and a significant reduction in CVC was observed (0.74 +/- 0.14 vs. 0.62 +/- 0.12 ml x min(-1) x mmHg(-1); P < 0.05). Similar results were observed during moderate exercise in HF. Muscle metaboreflex activation did not elicit significant changes in either -dl/dt(min) or +dl/dt(max) during mild exercise in HF. We conclude that during HF the elevated muscle metaboreflex-induced increases in sympathetic tone to the heart functionally vasoconstrict the coronary vasculature, which may limit increases in myocardial performance. 相似文献
10.
Iellamo F Sala-Mercado JA Ichinose M Hammond RL Pallante M Ichinose T Stephenson LW O'Leary DS 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2007,293(3):H1929-H1936
In heart failure (HF), there is a reduced baroreflex sensitivity at rest, and during dynamic exercise there is enhanced muscle metaboreflex activation (MRA). However, how the arterial baroreflex modulates HR during exercise is unknown. We tested the hypothesis that spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity (SBRS) is attenuated during exercise in HF and that MRA further depresses SBRS. In seven conscious dogs we measured heart rate (HR), cardiac output, and left ventricular systolic pressure at rest and during mild and moderate dynamic exercise, before and during MRA (via imposed reductions of hindlimb blood flow), and before and after induction of HF (by rapid ventricular pacing). SBRS was assessed by the sequences method. In control, SBRS was reduced from rest with a progressive resetting of the baroreflex stimulus-response relationship in proportion to exercise intensity and magnitude of MRA. In HF, SBRS was significantly depressed in all settings; however, the changes with exercise and MRA occurred with a pattern similar to the control state. As in control, the baroreflex stimulus-response relationship showed an intensity- and muscle metaboreflex (MMR)-dependent rightward and upward shift. The results of this study indicate that HF induces an impairment in baroreflex control of HR at rest and during exercise, although the effects of exercise and MRA on SBRS occur with a similar pattern as in control, indicating the persistence of some vagal activity. 相似文献
11.
Crisafulli A Salis E Tocco F Melis F Milia R Pittau G Caria MA Solinas R Meloni L Pagliaro P Concu A 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2007,292(6):H2988-H2996
The muscle metaboreflex is enhanced in chronic heart failure (CHF) patients, and this fact has been associated with the early fatigue shown by these patients in response to exercise. In animal studies of CHF, it was found that the limited capacity to enhance ventricular performance is responsible for a functional shift from a cardiac output to a systemic vascular resistance (SVR) increase in the mechanism by which the cardiovascular system raises blood pressure in response to the metaboreflex. However, the existence of this functional shift is still unknown in humans. The present study was undertaken to test the hypothesis that a similar hemodynamic response was also present in humans with CHF. The hemodynamic response to metaboreflex activation obtained through postexercise ischemia was assessed in nine patients with CHF and nine healthy controls (CTL) by means of impedance cardiography. The main results were that 1) the blood pressure rise due to the metaboreflex was similar in the two groups; 2) the CTL group achieved the blood pressure response via cardiac output increase, and the CHF group, via SVR increase; and 3) stroke volume was enhanced in the CTL group and decreased in the CHF group. This study demonstrates that in CHF patients, metaboreflex recruitment causes a functional shift from flow increase to peripheral vasoconstriction in the mechanism through which blood pressure is increased. The incapacity to enhance cardiac performance and stroke volume is probably the primary cause of this cardiovascular alteration. 相似文献
12.
13.
Ichinose M Sala-Mercado JA O'Leary DS Hammond RL Coutsos M Ichinose T Pallante M Iellamo F 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2008,294(3):H1310-H1316
We have previously shown that spontaneous baroreflex-induced changes in heart rate (HR) do not always translate into changes in cardiac output (CO) at rest. We have also shown that heart failure (HF) decreases this linkage between changes in HR and CO. Whether dynamic exercise and muscle metaboreflex activation (via imposed reductions in hindlimb blood flow) further alter this translation in normal and HF conditions is unknown. We examined these questions using conscious, chronically instrumented dogs before and after pacing-induced HF during mild and moderate dynamic exercise with and without muscle metaboreflex activation. We measured left ventricular systolic pressure (LVSP), CO, and HR and analyzed the spontaneous HR-LVSP and CO-LVSP relationships. In normal animals, mild exercise significantly decreased HR-LVSP (-3.08 +/- 0.5 vs. -5.14 +/- 0.6 beats.min(-1).mmHg(-1); P < 0.05) and CO-LVSP (-134.74 +/- 24.5 vs. -208.6 +/- 22.2 ml.min(-1).mmHg(-1); P < 0.05). Moderate exercise further decreased both and, in addition, significantly reduced HR-CO translation (25.9 +/- 2.8% vs. 52.3 +/- 4.2%; P < 0.05). Muscle metaboreflex activation at both workloads decreased HR-LVSP, whereas it had no significant effect on CO-LVSP and the HR-CO translation. HF significantly decreased HR-LVSP, CO-LVSP, and the HR-CO translation in all situations. We conclude that spontaneous baroreflex HR responses do not always cause changes in CO during exercise. Moreover, muscle metaboreflex activation during mild and moderate dynamic exercise reduces this coupling. In addition, in HF the HR-CO translation also significantly decreases during both workloads and decreases even further with muscle metaboreflex activation. 相似文献
14.
Y. R. Bravyy E. Y. Bersenov S. S. Missina A. S. Borovik A. P. Sharova O. L. Vinogradova 《Human physiology》2010,36(7):844-848
The effects of four-day dry immersion on metaboreflex regulation of hemodynamics were evaluated during local static exercise
(30% of the maximum voluntary contraction) of the calf plantar flexors. One group of immersed subjects received low-frequency
electrostimulation of their leg muscles to decrease the immersion effect on the EMG of exercising muscles. Metaboreflex regulation
was evaluated by comparison of cardiovascular responses to physical loads with and without post-exercise circulatory occlusion.
Immersion slightly increased the heart rate (HR) and reduced the systolic blood pressure in resting subjects; however, it
did not have a distinct effect on blood pressure (BP) and HR during exercise or metaboreflex potentiation of hemodynamic shifts. 相似文献
15.
Trombetta IC Batalha LT Rondon MU Laterza MC Kuniyoshi FH Gowdak MM Barretto AC Halpern A Villares SM Negrão CE 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2003,285(3):H974-H982
We studied the effects of a hypocaloric diet (D, n = 24, age: 32.2 +/- 1.4 yr, body mass index: 34.7 +/- 0.5 kg/m2) and a hypocaloric diet associated with exercise training (D + T, n = 25, age: 32.3 +/- 1.3 yr, body mass index: 32.9 +/- 0.4 kg/m2) on muscle metaboreflex control, muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA, microneurography), blood pressure, and forearm blood flow (plethysmography) levels during handgrip exercise at 10% and 30% of maximal voluntary contraction in normotensive obese women. An additional 10 women matched by age and body mass index were studied as a nonadherent group. D or D + T significantly decreased body mass index. D or D + T significantly decreased resting MSNA (bursts/100 heartbeats). The absolute levels of MSNA were significantly lower throughout 10% and 30% exercise after D or D + T, although no change was found in the magnitude of response of MSNA. D + T, but not D, significantly increased resting forearm vascular conductance. D + T significantly increased the magnitude of the response of forearm vascular conductance during 30% exercise. D or D + T significantly increased MSNA levels during posthandgrip circulatory arrest when muscle metaboreflex is isolated. In conclusion, weight loss improves muscle metaboreflex control in obese women. Weight loss reduces MSNA, which seems to be centrally mediated. Weight loss by D + T increases forearm vascular conductance at rest and during exercise in obese individuals. 相似文献
16.
Leal AK Williams MA Garry MG Mitchell JH Smith SA 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2008,295(4):H1429-H1438
Exercise in hypertensive individuals elicits exaggerated increases in mean arterial pressure (MAP) and heart rate (HR) that potentially enhance the risk for adverse cardiac events or stroke. Evidence suggests that exercise pressor reflex function (EPR; a reflex originating in skeletal muscle) is exaggerated in this disease and contributes significantly to the potentiated cardiovascular responsiveness. However, the mechanism of EPR overactivity in hypertension remains unclear. EPR function is mediated by the muscle mechanoreflex (activated by stimulation of mechanically sensitive afferent fibers) and metaboreflex (activated by stimulation of chemically sensitive afferent fibers). Therefore, we hypothesized the enhanced cardiovascular response mediated by the EPR in hypertension is due to functional alterations in the muscle mechanoreflex and metaboreflex. To test this hypothesis, mechanically and chemically sensitive afferent fibers were selectively activated in normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) and spontaneously hypertensive (SHR) decerebrate rats. Activation of mechanically sensitive fibers by passively stretching hindlimb muscle induced significantly greater increases in MAP and HR in SHR than WKY over a wide range of stimulus intensities. Activation of chemically sensitive fibers by administering capsaicin (0.01-1.00 microg/100 microl) into the hindlimb arterial supply induced increases in MAP that were significantly greater in SHR compared with WKY. However, HR responses to capsaicin were not different between the two groups at any dose. This data is consistent with the concept that the abnormal EPR control of MAP described previously in hypertension is mediated by both mechanoreflex and metaboreflex overactivity. In contrast, the previously reported alterations in the EPR control of HR in hypertension may be principally due to overactivity of the mechanically sensitive component of the reflex. 相似文献
17.
Cardiovascular and humoral responses to sustained muscle metaboreflex activation in humans 总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4
Nishiyasu Takeshi; Tan Nobusuke; Morimoto Keiko; Sone Ryoko; Murakami Naotoshi 《Journal of applied physiology》1998,84(1):116-122
Nishiyasu, Takeshi, Nobusuke Tan, Keiko Morimoto, RyokoSone, and Naotoshi Murakami. Cardiovascular and humoral responses to sustained muscle metaboreflex activation in humans.J. Appl. Physiol. 84(1): 116-122, 1998.The cardiovascular and humoral responses to sustained musclemetaboreflex activation were examined in eight male volunteers whilethey performed two 24-min exercise protocols. Each of these consistedof six 1-min bouts of isometric handgrip exercise (the left and righthands being used alternately) at 50% of maximal voluntary contraction;after each bout, there was either 3-min postexercise occlusion(occlusion protocol) or 3-min rest (control protocol). In the occlusionprotocol, mean arterial blood pressure was ~25 mmHg higher thanduring the control protocol, indicating that the muscle metaboreflexwas activated during occlusion. During the control protocol, plasmarenin activity, plasma vasopressin, and adrenocorticotropic hormonevalues were not significantly different from the values at rest. Duringthe occlusion protocol, however, plasma renin activity, plasmavasopressin, and adrenocorticotropic hormone were all significantlyincreased at 25 min. These data demonstrate that, in humans, thesustained activation of the muscle metaboreflex causes the secretion of several hormones originating from different regions. 相似文献
18.
Ichinose M Saito M Wada H Kitano A Kondo N Nishiyasu T 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2004,286(2):H701-H707
We aimed to investigate the interaction [with respect to the regulation of muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) and blood pressure] between the arterial baroreflex and muscle metaboreflex in humans. In 10 healthy subjects who performed a 1-min sustained handgrip exercise at 50% maximal voluntary contraction followed by forearm occlusion, arterial baroreflex control of MSNA (burst incidence and strength and total activity) was evaluated by analyzing the relationship between beat-by-beat spontaneous variations in diastolic arterial blood pressure (DAP) and MSNA both during supine rest (control) and during postexercise muscle ischemia (PEMI). During PEMI (vs. control), 1) the linear relationship between burst incidence and DAP was shifted rightward with no alteration in sensitivity, 2) the linear relationship between burst strength and DAP was shifted rightward and upward with no change in sensitivity, and 3) the linear relationship between total activity and DAP was shifted to a higher blood pressure and its sensitivity was increased. The modification of the control of total activity that occurs in PEMI could be a consequence of alterations in the baroreflex control of both MSNA burst incidence and burst strength. These results suggest that the arterial baroreflex and muscle metaboreflex interact to control both the occurrence and strength of MSNA bursts. 相似文献
19.
Congestive heart failure is a complex clinical syndrome that has its basis in an abnormality of myocardial cell function resulting in impaired ventricular performance, exercise intolerance, and ventricular arrhythmias. The functional defect in myocardial performance may be related to alterations in receptor function, in regulatory proteins, or in biochemical mechanisms. Remodeling of the left ventricle has been observed to play an important role in the natural course of heart failure. The complex interplay between cellular elongation, reactive hypertrophy, and the influence of the change from ellipsoid to spheroidal shape of the left ventricle after acute myocardial infarction are just beginning to be understood. Prevention of this remodeling effect by pharmacologic intervention is being widely explored, although the mechanisms are poorly defined. Impedance to left ventricular ejection is also an important determinant of cardiac performance in heart failure. Constriction of arteriolar resistance vessels and reduction in compliance of arterial conductance vessels is a common manifestation of heart failure and may be under the influence of neural, hormonal, endothelial, and local regulatory factors. Increased tone of venous capacitance vessels contributes to a shift of blood centrally and to an increase in ventricular preload. Vasodilator drugs by relaxing the arterial, arteriolar, and venous vasculature result in a reduction in impedance and left ventricular afterload and a decrease in cardiac filling pressure and preload. Structural changes of hypertrophy and remodeling apparently contribute to the changes in resistance, compliance, and capacitance in the vasculature. Treatment of heart failure is aimed at relieving symptoms and prolonging life. Interventions to improve left ventricular function are critical to symptom relief. Vasodilators have been most effective for this purpose, and new positive inotropic drugs are being tested for efficacy. Long-term benefit may require interference with the myocardial and peripheral vascular remodeling processes that lead to progressive depression of ventricular performance. New insights into the cellular and subcellular mechanisms of this progression are critical to the development of innovative therapeutic strategies. 相似文献
20.
Ichinose M Koga S Fujii N Kondo N Nishiyasu T 《American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology》2007,293(1):H416-H424
Continuous measurement of leg blood flow (LBF) using Doppler ultrasound with simultaneous noninvasive mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) measurement permits beat-to-beat estimates of leg vascular resistance (LVR) in humans. We tested the hypothesis that the beat-to-beat fluctuations in LVR and the dynamic relationship between MAP and LVR are modulated by the activation of muscle metaboreflex. Twelve healthy subjects performed a 1-min isometric handgrip exercise at 50% maximal voluntary contraction, which was followed by a period of imposed postexercise muscle ischemia (PEMI). We then employed transfer function analysis to examine the dynamic relationships between MAP and LBF and between MAP and LVR, both at rest (control) and during PEMI. We found the following. 1) The spectral power for LBF and LVR in low-frequency ( approximately 0.03-0.15 Hz) range significantly increased from control during PEMI without a significant change in the high-frequency ( approximately 0.15-0.35 Hz) power. 2) During PEMI, the transfer function gains for MAP-LBF and MAP-LVR relationships in the low-frequency ( approximately 0.05-0.15 Hz) range were significantly increased during PEMI (vs. control) but were unchanged in the high-frequency ( approximately 0.2-0.3 Hz) range. 3) The phases for MAP-LBF and MAP-LVR relationships were not different during control and PEMI. The phase for MAP-LVR relationship revealed that changes in MAP were followed by directionally similar changes in LVR, which is consistent with the characteristics of intrinsic vascular regulatory mechanisms such as the myogenic response of the resistance arteries. We suggest that, in humans, modulation of the dynamic MAP-LVR relationship during activation of the muscle metaboreflex reflects complex interactions between intrinsic vascular regulatory mechanisms and sympathetic vascular regulation. 相似文献