| Literature DB >> 25870188 |
Jacqueline K Limberg1, Jennifer L Taylor1, Michael T Mozer1, Simmi Dube1, Ananda Basu1, Rita Basu1, Robert A Rizza1, Timothy B Curry1, Michael J Joyner2, Erica A Wehrwein1.
Abstract
Hypoglycemia results in a reduction in cardiac baroreflex sensitivity and a shift in the baroreflex working range to higher heart rates. This effect is mediated, in part, by the carotid chemoreceptors. Therefore, we hypothesized hypoglycemia-mediated changes in baroreflex control of heart rate would be blunted in carotid body-resected patients when compared with healthy controls. Five patients with bilateral carotid body resection for glomus tumors and 10 healthy controls completed a 180-minute hyperinsulinemic, hypoglycemic (≈3.3 mmol/L) clamp. Changes in heart rate, blood pressure, and spontaneous cardiac baroreflex sensitivity were assessed. Baseline baroreflex sensitivity was not different between groups (P>0.05). Hypoglycemia resulted in a reduction in baroreflex sensitivity in both the groups (main effect of time, P<0.01) and responses were lower in resected patients when compared with controls (main effect of group, P<0.05). Hypoglycemia resulted in large reductions in systolic (-17±7 mm Hg) and mean (-14±5 mm Hg) blood pressure in resected patients that were not observed in controls (interaction of group and time, P<0.05). Despite lower blood pressures, increases in heart rate with hypoglycemia were blunted in resected patients (interaction of group and time, P<0.01). Major novel findings from this study demonstrate that intact carotid chemoreceptors are essential for increasing heart rate and maintaining arterial blood pressure during hypoglycemia in humans. These data support a contribution of the carotid chemoreceptors to blood pressure control and highlight the potential widespread effects of carotid body resection in humans.Entities:
Keywords: blood pressure; carotid body tumor; chemoreceptor cells; glucose
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25870188 PMCID: PMC4507506 DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.115.05325
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hypertension ISSN: 0194-911X Impact factor: 10.190