Schobel H P, Oren R M, Mark A L, Ferguson D W
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Iowa Hospitals and College of Medicine, Iowa City, USA.
Clin Auton Res. 1995 Apr;5(2):71-80. doi: 10.1007/BF01827466.
Reflex sympathetic responses to physiologic stress are known to be modulated by afferent sensory mechanisms. However, the potential influence of baseline sympathetic tone on these reflex-mediated responses is unclear. To test the hypothesis that the resting level of muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) influences reflex-mediated changes in MSNA in normal man, MSNA, blood pressure (BP), central venous pressure (CVP), and heart rate (HR) was measured in 38 normal subjects at rest and during deactivation of cardiopulmonary baroreceptors (CPBR) with lower body negative pressure (LBNP; 0 to -15 mmHg). A cold pressor test (CPT) also was performed in 25 subjects. Incremental LBNP decreased CVP (from 5.8 +/- 0.4 to 2.1 +/- 0.4 mmHg) without altering BP or HR, and increased in MSNA burst frequency (from 22.5 +/- 1.4 to 30.2 +/- 1.4 bursts/min). There was no significant correlation between levels of MSNA and any haemodynamic parameter at rest. There was a significant inverse correlation between CPBR sympathetic gain (CPBRSG, slope of the regression line correlating percentage change in MSNA (bursts/min) per mmHg decrease in CVP during non-hypotensive LBNP) and resting MSNA (r = -0.72, p < 0.0001). A significant inverse correlation was also observed between MSNA responses to the CPT (expressed as percentage change in burst frequency from control) and the resting MSNA (r = -0.63, p = 0.008). Sixteen subjects were restudied 3 weeks to 14 months later to determine reproducibility of measurements; resting BP and CVP, HR, and MSNA levels were not different between the two sessions, as was CPBRSG. In ten of these 16 subjects, in whom the CPT was repeated the MSNA response also was not significantly different. These studies demonstrate an inverse relationship between resting MSNA and both cardiopulmonary baroreflex sensitivity and sympathetic neural responses to the non-baroreflex mediated cold pressor stimulus. These findings suggest that resting levels of sympathetic neural activity influence reflex-mediated changes in muscle sympathetic nerve activity.
已知对生理应激的反射性交感反应受传入感觉机制调节。然而,基线交感神经张力对这些反射介导反应的潜在影响尚不清楚。为了检验肌肉交感神经活动(MSNA)的静息水平会影响正常男性MSNA反射介导变化这一假设,对38名正常受试者在静息状态以及通过下体负压(LBNP;0至-15 mmHg)使心肺压力感受器(CPBR)失活期间测量了MSNA、血压(BP)、中心静脉压(CVP)和心率(HR)。还对25名受试者进行了冷加压试验(CPT)。递增的LBNP使CVP降低(从5.8±0.4降至2.1±0.4 mmHg),而未改变BP或HR,并使MSNA爆发频率增加(从22.5±1.4增至30.2±1.4次/分钟)。静息时MSNA水平与任何血流动力学参数之间均无显著相关性。在非低血压性LBNP期间,CPBR交感神经增益(CPBRSG,即CVP每降低1 mmHg时MSNA(爆发次数/分钟)百分比变化的回归线斜率)与静息MSNA之间存在显著负相关(r = -0.72,p < 0.0001)。在MSNA对CPT的反应(以爆发频率相对于对照的百分比变化表示)与静息MSNA之间也观察到显著负相关(r = -0.63,p = 0.008)。16名受试者在3周至14个月后再次接受研究以确定测量的可重复性;两次测量期间的静息BP、CVP、HR和MSNA水平以及CPBRSG均无差异。在这16名受试者中的10名中,重复进行CPT时,MSNA反应也无显著差异。这些研究表明静息MSNA与心肺压力反射敏感性以及对非压力反射介导的冷加压刺激的交感神经反应之间存在负相关关系。这些发现提示交感神经活动的静息水平会影响肌肉交感神经活动的反射介导变化。