Ludwig D A, Convertino V A
Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of North Carolina, Greensboro 27412-5001.
Aviat Space Environ Med. 1994 May;65(5):404-11.
To adequately assess the viability of any particular causal theory of orthostatic intolerance, physical and physiological parameters thought to be associated with orthostasis must be evaluated simultaneously within the same individual. Time, cost, and complexity of instrumentation generally limit studies of orthostatic intolerance to a single independent effect for any given sample of subjects. We, therefore, measured 6 key physical and physiological variables associated with various theories of orthostatic intolerance in 14 males to test the hypothesis that physical factors rather than physiological reflex mechanisms were dominant in contributing to orthostatic tolerance. Measurements included height, plasma volume (expressed as percent of total weight), variation in R-R interval, leg compliance, and carotid-cardiac (high pressure), and cardiopulmonary (low pressure) baroreflex sensitivity. Subjects' orthostatic intolerance was quantified by time to syncope during progressive supine lower body decompression. Correlations, regression coefficients, and indices of replicability were calculated using 500 to 1,000 bootstrap resamplings of the original 14 observations. Although all six measurements correlated with time to syncope when evaluated individually, only height (negative), percent plasma volume weight (positive), and, to a lesser extent, carotid-cardiac baroreflex sensitivity yielded consistent (reproducible) results when all measures were tested simultaneously. These results suggest that while orthostatic intolerance may be dependent upon a variety of physiological reflexes, physical factors such as height and plasma volume tend to dominate the prediction of time to syncope during lower body negative pressure (LBNP). Physiological reflexes, which act to maintain adequate profusion to the brain during normal terrestrial posture in humans, may be overwhelmed by the additional orthostatic challenge imposed by progressive lower body decompression.
为了充分评估任何特定的直立不耐受因果理论的可行性,必须在同一个体中同时评估被认为与直立状态相关的物理和生理参数。时间、成本和仪器的复杂性通常将直立不耐受的研究限制在对任何给定受试者样本的单一独立效应上。因此,我们测量了14名男性与各种直立不耐受理论相关的6个关键物理和生理变量,以检验以下假设:在导致直立耐受方面,物理因素而非生理反射机制起主导作用。测量包括身高、血浆容量(以占总体重的百分比表示)、R-R间期变化、腿部顺应性、颈动脉-心脏(高压)和心肺(低压)压力反射敏感性。通过在渐进性仰卧位下体减压过程中到晕厥的时间来量化受试者的直立不耐受。使用对原始14次观察进行500至1000次自举重采样计算相关性、回归系数和可重复性指数。虽然单独评估时所有六项测量都与到晕厥的时间相关,但当同时测试所有测量时,只有身高(负相关)、血浆容量体重百分比(正相关)以及在较小程度上的颈动脉-心脏压力反射敏感性产生了一致(可重复)的结果。这些结果表明,虽然直立不耐受可能取决于多种生理反射,但身高和血浆容量等物理因素在预测下体负压(LBNP)期间到晕厥的时间方面往往占主导地位。在人类正常地面姿势期间维持对大脑足够灌注的生理反射,可能会被渐进性下体减压带来的额外直立挑战所压倒。