Jardine D L, Ikram H, Frampton C M, Frethey R, Bennett S I, Crozier I G
Department of Cardiology, Christchurch Hospital, Christchurch, New Zealand.
Am J Physiol. 1998 Jun;274(6):H2110-5. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.1998.274.6.H2110.
In the pathophysiological study of vasovagal syncope, the nature of the interaction between baroreceptor sensitivity (BS), sympathetic withdrawal, and parasympathetic activity has yet to be ascertained. Altered BS may predispose toward abnormal sympathetic and parasympathetic responses to orthostasis, causing hypotension that may progress to syncope if there is sympathetic withdrawal. To examine this hypothesis, we monitored blood pressure (BP), heart rate (HR), BS, forearm blood flow, and muscle nerve sympathetic activity (MNSA) continuously in 18 vasovagal patients during 60 degrees head-up tilt, syncope, and recovery. Results were compared with those of 17 patients who were able to tolerate tilt for 45 min. During early tilt, BP was maintained in both groups by an increase in HR and MNSA from baseline (P < 0.01), but BS decreased more in the syncopal group (P < 0.05). At the start of presyncope (mean 2.7 +/- 0.2 min before syncope and 15.2 +/- 12 min after tilt), when BP fell, HR and sympathetic activity remained increased from baseline (P < 0.01). Thereafter, BP and HR correlated directly with sympathetic activity and regressed in linear fashion until syncope (P < 0.001), whereas BS increased to baseline. At syncope, BP, HR, and sympathetic activity fell below baseline (P < 0.01, P < 0.05, and P < 0.01, respectively), but BS did not increase. During recovery, sympathetic activity increased to baseline and BS increased (P < 0.05), whereas HR and BP remained low (P < 0.01 and P < 0.05, respectively). The mechanism for the initiation of hypotension during presyncope remains unknown, but BS may contribute. Vasodilatation and bradycardia during presyncope appear to be more closely related to withdrawal of sympathetic activity than to increased parasympathetic cardiac activity.
在血管迷走性晕厥的病理生理学研究中,压力感受器敏感性(BS)、交感神经抑制和副交感神经活动之间相互作用的本质尚未明确。BS改变可能易导致对直立位的异常交感和副交感反应,引起低血压,如果出现交感神经抑制,低血压可能进展为晕厥。为检验这一假设,我们在18例血管迷走性晕厥患者进行60度头高位倾斜、晕厥及恢复过程中,持续监测其血压(BP)、心率(HR)、BS、前臂血流量和肌肉神经交感神经活动(MNSA)。将结果与17例能够耐受45分钟倾斜试验的患者进行比较。在倾斜早期,两组的血压均通过HR和MNSA较基线水平升高得以维持(P<0.01),但晕厥组的BS下降更为明显(P<0.05)。在晕厥前期开始时(平均在晕厥前2.7±0.2分钟和倾斜后15.2±12分钟),当血压下降时,HR和交感神经活动较基线水平仍升高(P<0.01)。此后,BP和HR与交感神经活动直接相关,并呈线性回归直至晕厥(P<0.001),而BS升至基线水平。在晕厥时,BP、HR和交感神经活动降至基线水平以下(分别为P<0.01、P<0.05和P<0.01),但BS未升高。在恢复过程中,交感神经活动升至基线水平,BS升高(P<0.05),而HR和BP仍较低(分别为P<0.01和P<0.05)。晕厥前期低血压起始的机制尚不清楚,但BS可能起一定作用。晕厥前期的血管舒张和心动过缓似乎与交感神经活动抑制的关系比与副交感神经心脏活动增强的关系更为密切。