Wilson T D, Cotter L A, Draper J A, Misra S P, Rice C D, Cass S P, Yates B J
University of Pittsburgh, School of Medicine, Department of Otolaryngology, Eye and Ear Institute, Rm 519, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA.
J Physiol. 2006 Sep 1;575(Pt 2):671-84. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2006.112904. Epub 2006 Jun 29.
Previous experiments have demonstrated that the vestibular system contributes to regulating sympathetic nervous system activity, particularly the discharges of vasoconstrictor fibres. In the present study, we examined the physiological significance of vestibulosympathetic responses by comparing blood flow and vascular resistance in the forelimb and hindlimb during head-up tilt from the prone position before and after the removal of vestibular inputs through a bilateral vestibular neurectomy. Experiments were performed on conscious cats that were trained to remain sedentary on a tilt table during rotations up to 60 deg in amplitude. Blood flow through the femoral and brachial arteries was recorded during whole-body tilt using perivascular probes; blood pressure was recorded using a telemetry system and vascular resistance was calculated from blood pressure and blood flow measurements. In vestibular-intact animals, 60 deg head-up tilt produced approximately 20% decrease in femoral blood flow and approximately 37% increase in femoral vascular resistance relative to baseline levels before tilt; similar effects were also observed for the brachial artery ( approximately 25% decrease in blood flow and approximately 38% increase in resistance). Following the removal of vestibular inputs, brachial blood flow and vascular resistance during head-up tilt were almost unchanged. In contrast, femoral vascular resistance increased only approximately 6% from baseline during 60 deg head-up rotation delivered in the first week after elimination of vestibular signals and approximately 16% in the subsequent 3-week period (as opposed to the approximately 37% increase in resistance that occurred before lesion). These data demonstrate that vestibular inputs associated with postural alterations elicit regionally specific increases in vascular resistance that direct blood flow away from the region of the body where blood pooling may occur. Thus, the data support the hypothesis that vestibular influences on the cardiovascular system serve to protect against the occurrence of orthostatic hypotension.
先前的实验表明,前庭系统有助于调节交感神经系统的活动,尤其是血管收缩纤维的放电。在本研究中,我们通过比较双侧前庭神经切除术前、后从俯卧位进行抬头倾斜时前肢和后肢的血流和血管阻力,研究了前庭交感反应的生理意义。实验在清醒的猫身上进行,这些猫经过训练,在振幅高达60度的旋转过程中能保持安静地躺在倾斜台上。使用血管周围探头记录全身倾斜过程中股动脉和肱动脉的血流;使用遥测系统记录血压,并根据血压和血流测量值计算血管阻力。在前庭完整的动物中,相对于倾斜前的基线水平,60度抬头倾斜使股动脉血流减少约20%,股血管阻力增加约37%;肱动脉也观察到类似的效果(血流减少约25%,阻力增加约38%)。去除前庭输入后,抬头倾斜时肱动脉血流和血管阻力几乎没有变化。相比之下,在前庭信号消除后的第一周,60度抬头旋转时股血管阻力仅比基线增加约6%,在随后的3周内增加约16%(与损伤前约37%的阻力增加相反)。这些数据表明,与姿势改变相关联的前庭输入会引起血管阻力的区域特异性增加,从而使血流从可能发生血液淤积的身体区域分流。因此,这些数据支持了这样一种假设,即前庭对心血管系统的影响有助于预防直立性低血压的发生。