INSERM UMR1093-CAPS, Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté, UFR des Sciences du Sport, 21000, Dijon, France.
Otto Loewi Research Center for Vascular Biology, Immunology and Inflammation, Physiology Division, Research Unit: "Gravitational Physiology Aging and Medicine", Medical University of Graz, Neue Stiftingtalstrasse 6, D-5, 8036, Graz, Austria.
Eur J Appl Physiol. 2019 Apr;119(4):951-960. doi: 10.1007/s00421-019-04084-y. Epub 2019 Feb 7.
The body behaves as a global system with many interconnected subsystems. While the effects of a gravitational change on body responses have been extensively studied in isolation, we are not aware of any study that has examined these two types of body responses concurrently. Here, we examined how the cognitive and cardiovascular systems respond during application of varying gravito-inertial stressors in men and women.
Ten men and nine women underwent three 5-min centrifugation sessions (2.4 g at the feet, 1.5 g at the heart) in which participants rhythmically moved a hand-held object for 20 s. Grip force and hemodynamic responses were continuously measured during centrifugation and rest periods.
Men optimized the modulation between grip force and the destabilizing load force, but not women. Exposure to artificial gravity induced higher heart rate and mean arterial pressure in both sexes compared to baseline. However, during artificial gravity exposure, only women decreased heart rate across sessions. Interestingly, we found that finishers of the protocol (mostly men) and Non-finishers (mostly women) exhibited divergent patterns of hemodynamic responses.
We speculate that the lack of grip force adaptation reported in women could be linked to the challenged hemodynamic responses during artificial gravity. By deriving a simple model to predict failure to complete the protocol, we found that mean arterial pressure-and not sex of the participant-was the most relevant factor. As artificial gravity is being proposed as a countermeasure in long-term manned missions, the observed effects in grip force adaptation and hemodynamic responses during varying gravito-inertial stressors application are particularly important.
人体作为一个具有许多相互关联子系统的整体系统运作。虽然已经广泛研究了重力变化对身体反应的单一影响,但我们不知道有任何研究同时检查了这两种身体反应。在这里,我们研究了在男性和女性中应用不同的重惯性应激源时认知和心血管系统如何响应。
10 名男性和 9 名女性接受了三次 5 分钟的离心(脚部 2.4g,心脏 1.5g),在此期间,参与者有节奏地用手持物体移动 20 秒。在离心和休息期间连续测量握力和血液动力学反应。
男性优化了握力与失稳负荷力之间的调制,但女性没有。与基线相比,暴露于人工重力会导致男女心率和平均动脉压升高。然而,在人工重力暴露期间,只有女性在整个过程中降低了心率。有趣的是,我们发现完成方案的人(主要是男性)和未完成的人(主要是女性)表现出不同的血液动力学反应模式。
我们推测,女性报告的握力适应性缺乏可能与人工重力期间的血液动力学反应挑战有关。通过推导出一个简单的模型来预测无法完成方案,我们发现平均动脉压——而不是参与者的性别——是最相关的因素。由于人工重力被提议作为长期载人任务的对策,因此在应用不同重惯性应激源期间观察到的握力适应性和血液动力学反应的影响尤为重要。