Publications by authors named "Brooke M Shafer"

Objective: Circadian disruption promotes weight gain and poor health. The extent to which sex plays a role in the relationship between the circadian timing of behaviors and health outcomes in individuals with overweight/obesity is unclear. We investigated the sex-specific associations between circadian alignment and cardiometabolic health markers in females and males with overweight/obesity.

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Hypoxia is a pivotal factor in the pathophysiology of various clinical conditions, including obstructive sleep apnea, which has a strong association with cardiovascular diseases like hypertension, posing significant health risks. Although the precise mechanisms linking hypoxemia-associated clinical conditions with hypertension remains incompletely understood, compelling evidence suggests that hypoxia induces plasticity of the neurocirculatory control system. Despite variations in experimental designs and the severity, frequency, and duration of hypoxia exposure, evidence from animal and human models consistently demonstrates the robust effects of hypoxemia in triggering reflex-mediated sympathetic activation.

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Purpose Of Review: Misalignment between the endogenous biological timing system and behavioral activities (i.e., sleep/wake, eating, activity) contributes to adverse cardiovascular health.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to explore the connections between overnight blood pressure, circadian rhythms, and sleep variability in nurses who work day or night shifts.
  • It involved 20 nurses (10 on dayshift and 10 on nightshift), conducting assessments on melatonin levels, blood pressure patterns, and sleep onset variability over a week.
  • Results revealed that nightshift workers experienced later circadian phases, higher sleep variability, and reduced overnight blood pressure dipping, suggesting that chronic circadian disruption may elevate cardiovascular risks for these individuals.
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Central sleep apnea (CSA) is pervasive during sleep at high altitude, disproportionately impacting men and associated with increased peripheral chemosensitivity. We aimed to assess whether biological sex affects loop gain (LGn) and CSA severity during sleep over 9-10 days of acclimatization to 3,800 m. We hypothesized that CSA severity would worsen with acclimatization in men but not in women because of greater increases in LGn in men.

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Post-hypoxia sympathoexcitation does not elicit corresponding changes in vascular tone, suggesting diminished sympathetic signalling. Blunted sympathetic transduction following acute hypoxia, however, has not been confirmed and the effects of hypoxia on the sympathetic transduction of mean arterial pressure (MAP) as a function of action potential (AP) activity is unknown. We hypothesized that MAP changes would be blunted during acute hypoxia but restored in recovery and asynchronous APs would elicit smaller MAP changes than synchronous APs.

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Baroreflex resetting permits sympathetic long-term facilitation (sLTF) following hypoxia; however, baroreflex control of action potential (AP) clusters and AP recruitment patterns facilitating sLTF is unknown. We hypothesized that baroreflex resetting of arterial pressure operating points (OPs) of AP clusters and recruitment of large-amplitude APs would mediate sLTF following hypoxia. Eight men (age: 24 (3) years; body mass index: 24 (3) kg/m ) underwent 20 min isocapnic hypoxia ( : 47 (2) mmHg) and 30 min recovery.

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Article Synopsis
  • Myocardial oxygen delivery is controlled by changes in blood vessel tone to meet the heart's metabolic needs, with a focus on how this is affected by altitude and exercise.
  • The study examined how the body's response to muscle metaboreflex activation during handgrip exercises differs between low altitude and both acute and prolonged high altitude conditions (3,800 m) in healthy males.
  • Results showed that acute high altitude led to a significant reduction in blood flow and vascular conductance in the coronary arteries compared to low altitude, but these effects were normalized after 8-9 days at high altitude.
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  • The study investigates how coronary blood flow regulation during acute hypoxia and adrenergic activation differs between males and females.
  • Both sexes show increased coronary blood velocity with hypoxia, but males' response is limited by adrenergic activity, while females are not affected in the same way.
  • Findings highlight significant sex-based differences in coronary blood flow control, which could have implications for understanding cardiovascular responses in men and women.
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Muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) can be acquired from humans using the technique of microneurography. The resulting integrated neurogram displays pulse-synchronous bursts of sympathetic activity, which undergoes processing for standard MSNA metrics including burst frequency, height, area, incidence, total activity, and latency. The procedure for detecting bursts of MSNA and calculating burst metrics is tedious and differs widely among laboratories worldwide.

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A small proportion of postganglionic muscle sympathetic single units can be inhibited during sympathoexcitatory stressors in humans. However, whether these responses are dependent on the specific stressor or the level of sympathoexcitation remains unclear. We hypothesize that, when matched by sympathoexcitatory magnitude, different stressors can evoke similar proportions of inhibited single units.

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Purpose: In normotensive patients with obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), the muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) response to exercise is increased while metaboreflex control of MSNA is decreased. We tested the hypotheses that acute intermittent hypercapnic hypoxia (IHH) in males free from OSA and associated comorbidities would augment the MSNA response to exercise but attenuate the change in MSNA during metaboreflex activation.

Methods: Thirteen healthy males (age = 24 ± 4 yr) were exposed to 40 min of IHH.

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The decline in cognition observed in obstructive sleep apnea is linked to intermittent hypercapnic hypoxia (IHH), which is known to impair cerebrovascular reactivity. Whether acute IHH impairs the matching of cerebral blood flow to metabolism (i.e.

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Key Points: Ventilatory long-term facilitation (vLTF) refers to respiratory neuroplasticity that develops following intermittent hypoxia in both healthy and clinical populations. A sustained hypercapnic background is argued to be required for full vLTF expression in humans. We determined whether acute intermittent hypercapnic hypoxia elicits vLTF during isocapnic-normoxic recovery in healthy males and females.

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This case study reports the efferent muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) discharge patterns during a sinus pause observed during a maximal end-expiratory apnea in a young healthy male (age = 26 yr). During a 15.3-s end-expiratory apnea following a bout of intermittent hypercapnic hypoxia, we observed a 5.

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Muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) exhibits well-described within-breath respiratory modulation, but the interactive contributions of the arterial baroreflex remain unclear. The present study assessed ) within-breath modulation of sympathetic baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) and ) the effect of acute intermittent hypercapnic hypoxia (IHH) on within-breath sympathetic BRS and respiratory-sympathetic entrainment. Seventeen men (24 ± 4 yr) underwent an 8- to 10-min spontaneously breathing baseline while continuous measures of blood pressure (BP), heart rate, MSNA, ventilation, and end-tidal gases were collected.

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Key Points: Intermittent hypoxia leads to long-lasting increases in muscle sympathetic nerve activity and blood pressure, contributing to increased risk for hypertension in obstructive sleep apnoea patients. We determined whether augmented vascular responses to increasing sympathetic vasomotor outflow, termed sympathetic neurovascular transduction (sNVT), accompanied changes in blood pressure following acute intermittent hypercapnic hypoxia in men. Lower body negative pressure was utilized to induce a range of sympathetic vasoconstrictor firing while measuring beat-by-beat blood pressure and forearm vascular conductance.

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Purpose: Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a prevalent form of sleep-disordered breathing. Evidence suggests that OSA may lead to cardiac remodeling, although the literature is equivocal. Previous literature suggests a high percentage of individuals entering a cardiac rehabilitation (CR) program also have OSA.

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The purpose of this study was to examine the independent and combined effects of carbohydrate and caffeine ingestion on performance and various physiological parameters during aerobic cycling (∼1 h). Ten male cyclists (28 ± 9 years, 73 ± 6 kg, 66 ± 9 mL·kg(-1)·min(-1) maximal oxygen consumption) performed 20 min of steady-state (SS) cycling (60% peak power (W(max))) followed by a simulated 20-km time trial (TT) under placebo (PLA), carbohydrate (CHO), caffeine (CAF), and combined CAF-CHO conditions, all of which were performed in the fed state. CAF-CHO improved TT performance by 3.

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