Literature DB >> 9841543

Interactions between CO2 chemoreflexes and arterial baroreflexes.

R A Henry1, I L Lu, L A Beightol, D L Eckberg.   

Abstract

We studied interactions between CO2 chemoreflexes and arterial baroreflexes in 10 supine healthy young men and women. We measured vagal carotid baroreceptor-cardiac reflexes and steady-state fast Fourier transform R-R interval and photoplethysmographic arterial pressure power spectra at three arterial pressure levels (nitroprusside, saline, and phenylephrine infusions) and three end-tidal CO2 levels (3, 4, and 5%, fixed-frequency, large-tidal-volume breathing, CO2 plus O2). Our study supports three principal conclusions. First, although low levels of CO2 chemoreceptor stimulation reduce R-R intervals and R-R interval variability, statistical modeling suggests that this effect is indirect rather than direct and is mediated by reductions of arterial pressure. Second, reductions of R-R intervals during hypocapnia reflect simple shifting of vagally mediated carotid baroreflex responses on the R-R interval axis rather than changes of baroreflex gain, range, or operational point. Third, the influence of CO2 chemoreceptor stimulation on arterial pressure (and, derivatively, on R-R intervals and R-R interval variability) depends critically on baseline arterial pressure levels: chemoreceptor effects are smaller when pressure is low and larger when arterial pressure is high.

Entities:  

Keywords:  NASA Discipline Cardiopulmonary; Non-NASA Center

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  1998        PMID: 9841543     DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.1998.274.6.h2177

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol        ISSN: 0002-9513


  16 in total

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10.  Mild central chemoreflex activation does not alter arterial baroreflex function in healthy humans.

Authors:  Grant H Simmons; Julie M Manson; John R Halliwill
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2007-07-19       Impact factor: 5.182

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