Holwerda Seth W, Restaino Robert M, Manrique Camila, Lastra Guido, Fisher James P, Fadel Paul J
Department of Medical Pharmacology and Physiology, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri;
Department of Medicine, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri;
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2016 Jan 15;310(2):H300-9. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.00636.2015. Epub 2015 Nov 13.
Previous studies have reported exaggerated increases in arterial blood pressure during exercise in type 2 diabetes (T2D) patients. However, little is known regarding the underlying neural mechanism(s) involved. We hypothesized that T2D patients would exhibit an augmented muscle metaboreflex activation and this contributes to greater pressor and sympathetic responses during exercise. Mean arterial pressure (MAP), heart rate (HR), and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) were measured in 16 patients with T2D (8 normotensive and 8 hypertensive) and 10 healthy controls. Graded isolation of the muscle metaboreflex was achieved by postexercise ischemia (PEI) following static handgrip performed at 30% and 40% maximal voluntary contraction (MVC). A cold pressor test (CPT) was also performed as a generalized sympathoexcitatory stimulus. Increases in MAP and MSNA during 30 and 40% MVC handgrip were augmented in T2D patients compared with controls (P < 0.05), and these differences were maintained during PEI (MAP: 30% MVC PEI: T2D, Δ16 ± 2 mmHg vs. controls, Δ8 ± 1 mmHg; 40% MVC PEI: T2D, Δ26 ± 3 mmHg vs. controls, Δ16 ± 2 mmHg, both P < 0.05). MAP and MSNA responses to handgrip and PEI were not different between normotensive and hypertensive T2D patients (P > 0.05). Interestingly, MSNA responses were also greater in T2D patients compared with controls during the CPT (P < 0.05). Collectively, these findings indicate that muscle metaboreflex activation is augmented in T2D patients and this contributes, in part, to augmented pressor and sympathetic responses to exercise in this patient group. Greater CPT responses suggest that a heightened central sympathetic reactivity may be involved.
先前的研究报道,2型糖尿病(T2D)患者在运动期间动脉血压会过度升高。然而,对于其中潜在的神经机制却知之甚少。我们推测,T2D患者会表现出增强的肌肉代谢性反射激活,这会导致运动期间更大的升压反应和交感神经反应。在16例T2D患者(8例血压正常和8例高血压患者)和10名健康对照者中测量了平均动脉压(MAP)、心率(HR)和肌肉交感神经活动(MSNA)。通过在30%和40%最大自主收缩(MVC)下进行静态握力后进行运动后缺血(PEI)来逐步分离肌肉代谢性反射。还进行了冷加压试验(CPT)作为一种全身性交感神经兴奋刺激。与对照组相比,T2D患者在30%和40%MVC握力期间MAP和MSNA的增加更为明显(P<0.05),并且在PEI期间这些差异仍然存在(MAP:30%MVC PEI:T2D患者,Δ16±2 mmHg,对照组,Δ8±1 mmHg;40%MVC PEI:T2D患者,Δ26±3 mmHg,对照组,Δ16±2 mmHg,均P<0.05)。血压正常和高血压的T2D患者对握力和PEI的MAP和MSNA反应没有差异(P>0.05)。有趣的是,在CPT期间,T2D患者的MSNA反应也比对照组更大(P<0.05)。总体而言,这些发现表明T2D患者的肌肉代谢性反射激活增强,这在一定程度上导致了该患者组对运动的升压反应和交感神经反应增强。更大的CPT反应表明可能涉及中枢交感神经反应性增强。