Author/Editor     Eiken, O; Sun, JC; Mekjavić, IB
Title     Effects of blood-volume distribution on the characteristics of the carotid baroreflex in humans at rest and during exercise
Type     članek
Source     Acta Physiol Scand
Vol. and No.     Letnik 150, št. 1
Publication year     1994
Volume     str. 89-94
Language     eng
Abstract     Seven supine subjects were studied at rest and during mild to moderate dynamic leg exercise with and without unloading of the cardiopulmonary baroreceptors accomplished by exposing the lower portion of the body to a subatmospheric pressure of 20 mmHg (Lower Body Negative Pressure, LBNP). The function of the cardiac branch of the carotid baroreflex was studied over its full operational range by measuring R-R intervals during application of pulse synchronous graded pressures (40 to -65 mmHg) in a neck-chamber device. Raising the carotid transmural pressure (systolic arterial pressure minus neck-chamber pressure) induced increasing R-R intervals in all conditions. In conformity with previous results from our laboratories it was found that the maximal rate of change in relative R-R intervals and the corresponding transmural pressure were higher during exercise than at rest, indicating that exercise increased the carotid baroreflex sensitivity and shifted its optimal buffering range to higher arterial pressures. LBNP did not affect the characteristics of the reflex at rest nor during exercise. It is concluded that reduced central venous pressure with consequent selective cardiopulmonary receptor disengagement exerts no influence on the carotid baroreflex control of heart rate (HR), as tested over the entire arterial pressure-effector response relation, either at rest or during mild-moderate exercise.
Descriptors     BAROREFLEX
BLOOD VOLUME
CAROTID SINUS
EXERCISE
REST
ADULT
CENTRAL VENOUS PRESSURE
ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY
EXERCISE TEST
HEART RATE
LOWER BODY NEGATIVE PRESSURE
PRESSORECEPTORS