Department of Physiology, University of Kentucky College of Medicine Lexington, KY, USA.
Front Physiol. 2011 Aug 27;2:53. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2011.00053. eCollection 2011.
We recorded via telemetry the arterial blood pressure (BP) and heart rate (HR) response to classical conditioning following the spontaneous onset of autoimmune diabetes in BBDP/Wor rats vs. age-matched, diabetes-resistant control (BBDR/Wor) rats. Our purpose was to evaluate the autonomic regulatory responses to an acute stress in a diabetic state of up to 12 months duration. The stress was a 15-s pulsed tone (CS+) followed by a 0.5-s tail shock. The initial, transient increase in BP (i.e., the "first component," or C(1)), known to be derived from an orienting response and produced by a sympathetic increase in peripheral resistance, was similar in diabetic and control rats through ∼9 months of diabetes; it was smaller in diabetic rats 10 months after diabetes onset. Weakening of the C(1) BP increase in rats that were diabetic for >10 months is consistent with the effects of sympathetic neuropathy. A longer-latency, smaller, but sustained "second component" (C(2)) conditional increase in BP, that is acquired as a rat learns the association between CS+ and the shock, and which results from an increase in cardiac output, was smaller in the diabetic vs. control rats starting from the first month of diabetes. A concomitant HR slowing was also smaller in diabetic rats. The difference in the C(2) BP increase, as observed already during the first month of diabetes, is probably secondary to the effects of hyperglycemia upon myocardial metabolism and contractile function, but it may also result from effects on cognition. The small HR slowing concomitant with the C(2) pressor event is probably secondary to differences in baroreflex activation or function, though parasympathetic dysfunction may contribute later in the duration of diabetes. The nearly immediate deficit after disease onset in the C(2) response indicates that diabetes alters BP and HR responses to external challenges prior to the development of structural changes in the vasculature or autonomic nerves.
我们通过遥测记录了 BBDP/Wor 大鼠自身免疫性糖尿病自发发作后经典条件反射引起的动脉血压(BP)和心率(HR)反应,与年龄匹配、糖尿病抗性对照(BBDR/Wor)大鼠进行比较。我们的目的是评估在 12 个月的糖尿病状态下,急性应激对自主神经调节反应。应激是一个 15 秒脉冲音(CS+),随后是 0.5 秒的尾部电击。BP 的初始瞬态增加(即“第一成分”或 C(1))已知来源于定向反应,并由外周阻力的交感增加产生,在糖尿病发生的前 9 个月内,糖尿病和对照组大鼠的 C(1)相似;在糖尿病发病后 10 个月时,糖尿病大鼠的 C(1)较小。糖尿病大鼠中 C(1)BP 增加的减弱与交感神经病变的影响一致。一种较长潜伏期、较小但持续的“第二成分”(C(2))BP 条件性增加,作为大鼠学习 CS+和电击之间关联的结果,由于心输出量增加而产生,在糖尿病大鼠中从糖尿病的第一个月开始就较小。同时,HR 减速也较小。在糖尿病大鼠中,C(2)BP 增加的差异可能是由于高血糖对心肌代谢和收缩功能的影响,但也可能是由于认知的影响。C(2)加压事件伴随的 HR 减速较小,可能是由于压力反射激活或功能的差异,尽管副交感神经功能障碍可能在糖尿病持续时间后期产生影响。疾病发作后几乎立即出现的 C(2)反应缺陷表明,糖尿病改变了血压和心率对外部挑战的反应,而血管或自主神经的结构变化之前。