Literature DB >> 10993797

Renal SNA as the primary mediator of slow oscillations in blood pressure during hemorrhage.

S C Malpas1, D E Burgess.   

Abstract

Blood pressure contains a distinct low-frequency oscillation often termed the Mayer wave. This oscillation is caused by the action of the sympathetic nervous system on the vasculature and results from time delays in the baroreflex feedback loop for the control of sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) in response to changes in blood pressure. In this study, we used bilateral renal denervation to test the hypothesis that it is SNA to the kidney that contributes a large portion of the vascular resistance associated with changes in the strength of the slow oscillation in blood pressure. In conscious rabbits, SNA and blood pressure were measured during hemorrhage (blood withdrawal at 1.35 ml. min(-1). kg(-1) for 20 min). Spectral analysis identified a strong increase in power at 0.3 Hz in SNA and blood pressure in the initial compensatory phase of hemorrhage before blood pressure started to fall. However, in a separate group of renal denervated rabbits, although the power of the 0.3-Hz oscillation under control conditions in blood pressure was similar, it was not altered during hemorrhage. Wavelet analysis revealed the development of low-frequency oscillations at 0.1 Hz in both intact and denervated animals. In conclusion, we propose that changes in the strength of the oscillation at 0.3 Hz in arterial pressure during hemorrhage are primarily mediated by sympathetic activity directed to the kidney.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10993797     DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.2000.279.3.H1299

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol        ISSN: 0363-6135            Impact factor:   4.733


  5 in total

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4.  Modulation of heart rate variability during severe hemorrhage at different rates in conscious rats.

Authors:  Karen Porter; Joslyn Ahlgren; Jessie Stanley; Linda F Hayward
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  5 in total

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