Beck L, Baisch F, Gaffney F A, Buckey J C, Arbeille P, Patat F, ten Harkel A D, Hillebrecht A, Schulz H, Karemaker J M
DLR-Institute for Aerospace Medicine, Cologne, Germany.
Acta Physiol Scand Suppl. 1992;604:43-52.
The haemodynamic response to lower body negative pressure (LBNP) was studied in 6 test subjects before (baseline), during, and after (recovery) ten days of 6 degrees head-down bedrest. The LBNP protocol consisted of a 35 min control period, application of a staircase differential pressure profile (15 min at -15 mmHg; 5 min at -30 mmHg; 15 min at -40 mmHg), and a 10 min post-stress observation period. Cardiac output was measured by a foreign gas rebreathing technique. Finger plethysmographic arterial blood pressure (BP), ECG, and heart rate (HR), lower limb crossectional area, and the electrical impedance of three body segments were recorded continuously. As expected, HDT caused a decrease in plasma volume and total body fluid volume. Resting CO at the end of HDT was 16% below the baseline level and similar to CO in the upright position before HDT. Stroke volume (SV) was also reduced, but there were no significant changes in control HR or BP. Absolute changes in CO and SV during LBNP were similar at baseline and during HDT, but the relative changes were larger during HDT. HR and vasoconstriction responses were enhanced, but presyncope occurred in two subjects. Reduced cardiac filling with decreased stroke volume at rest is the apparent primary cause of the altered LBNP response during HDT.