Moir M Erin, Klassen Stephen A, Al-Khazraji Baraa K, Woehrle Emilie, Smith Sydney O, Matushewski Brad J, Kozić Duško, Dujić Željko, Barak Otto F, Shoemaker J Kevin
School of Kinesiology, University of Western Ontario , London, Ontario , Canada.
Faculty of Medicine, University of Novi Sad, Novi Sad, Serbia.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2019 Jun 1;126(6):1694-1700. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00210.2019. Epub 2019 May 9.
Breath-hold divers (BHD) experience repeated bouts of severe hypoxia and hypercapnia with large increases in blood pressure. However, the impact of long-term breath-hold diving on cerebrovascular control remains poorly understood. The ability of cerebral blood vessels to respond rapidly to changes in blood pressure represents the property of dynamic autoregulation. The current investigation tested the hypothesis that breath-hold diving impairs dynamic autoregulation to a transient hypotensive stimulus. Seventeen BHD (3 women, 11 ± 9 yr of diving) and 15 healthy controls (2 women) completed two or three repeated sit-to-stand trials during spontaneous breathing and poikilocapnic conditions. Heart rate (HR), finger arterial blood pressure (BP), and cerebral blood flow velocity (BFV) from the right middle cerebral artery were measured continuously with three-lead electrocardiography, finger photoplethysmography, and transcranial Doppler ultrasonography, respectively. End-tidal carbon dioxide partial pressure was measured with a gas analyzer. Offline, an index of cerebrovascular resistance (CVRi) was calculated as the quotient of mean BP and BFV. The rate of the drop in CVRi relative to the change in BP provided the rate of regulation [RoR; (∆CVRi/∆T)/∆BP]. The BHD demonstrated slower RoR than controls ( ≤ 0.001, 1.4). Underlying the reduced RoR in BHD was a longer time to reach nadir CVRi compared with controls ( = 0.004, = 1.1). In concert with the longer CVRi response, the time to reach peak BFV following standing was longer in BHD than controls ( = 0.01, = 0.9). The data suggest impaired dynamic autoregulatory mechanisms to hypotension in BHD. Impairments in dynamic cerebral autoregulation to hypotension are associated with breath-hold diving. Although weakened autoregulation was observed acutely in this group during apneic stress, we are the first to report on chronic adaptations in cerebral autoregulation. Impaired vasomotor responses underlie the reduced rate of regulation, wherein breath-hold divers demonstrate a prolonged dilatory response to transient hypotension. The slower cerebral vasodilation produces a longer perturbation in cerebral blood flow velocity, increasing the risk of cerebral ischemia.
屏气潜水者(BHD)会反复经历严重的缺氧和高碳酸血症,并伴有血压大幅升高。然而,长期屏气潜水对脑血管控制的影响仍知之甚少。脑血管对血压变化快速做出反应的能力代表了动态自动调节的特性。当前的研究检验了这样一个假设,即屏气潜水会损害对短暂性低血压刺激的动态自动调节。17名屏气潜水者(3名女性,潜水年限11±9年)和15名健康对照者(2名女性)在自主呼吸和异碳酸血症条件下完成了两到三次重复的坐立试验。分别使用三导联心电图、手指光电容积描记法和经颅多普勒超声连续测量心率(HR)、手指动脉血压(BP)和右大脑中动脉的脑血流速度(BFV)。使用气体分析仪测量呼气末二氧化碳分压。离线状态下,脑血管阻力指数(CVRi)计算为平均血压与BFV的商。CVRi相对于血压变化的下降速率提供了调节速率[RoR;(∆CVRi/∆T)/∆BP]。屏气潜水者的RoR比对照组慢(≤0.001,1.4)。与对照组相比,屏气潜水者达到最低CVRi的时间更长,这是RoR降低的原因(=0.004,=1.1)。与更长的CVRi反应一致,屏气潜水者站立后达到BFV峰值的时间比对照组更长(=0.01,=0.9)。数据表明屏气潜水者对低血压的动态自动调节机制受损。屏气潜水与对低血压的动态脑自动调节受损有关。尽管在该组中观察到在呼吸暂停应激期间急性自动调节减弱,但我们是第一个报道脑自动调节慢性适应性变化的。血管运动反应受损是调节速率降低的基础,其中屏气潜水者对短暂性低血压表现出延长的扩张反应。较慢的脑血管舒张会使脑血流速度产生更长时间的扰动,增加脑缺血的风险。