In some pathological conditions such as hypertension, there is an impairment in the autonomic control of blood pressure resulting in changes in baroreflex sensitivity. In the present study we tested the hypothesis that acute superoxide scavenging would restore the reduced baroreflex sensitivity in renovascular hypertension. Male Wistar rats underwent 2-Kidney-1-Clip (2K1C) or sham surgery and were maintained untouched for six weeks to develop hypertension. After six weeks, animals from the 2K1C group were hypertensive when compared to the sham group (165±9 vs. 108±7mm Hg, P<0.05). As a proof of principle for the hypertension model adopted, animals from the 2K1C group presented increased non-clipped kidney and cardiac mass index and reduced clipped kidney mass index. Regarding baroreflex, 2K1C rats presented diminished baroreflex sensitivity when compared to the sham group (2K1C+saline: -1.61±0.15 vs. sham+saline: -2.79±0.24bpm mm Hg(-1), p<0.05). Moreover, acute administration of Vitamin C (150mg/Kg, i.v.) restored baroreflex sensitivity in 2K1C rats (2K1C+Vit C: -3.08±0.37 vs. 2K1C+saline: -1.61±0.15bpm mm Hg(-1), p<0.05). Furthermore, administration of apocynin (30μg/Kg, i.v.), a NADPH oxidase inhibitor, also improved baroreflex sensitivity in the 2K1C group (2K1C+apocynin: -2.81±0.24 vs. 2K1C+saline: -1.61±0.15bpm mm Hg(-1), p<0.05). In addition, autonomic blockade with either methylatropine or propranolol reduced the changes in heart rate to the same extent in all groups suggesting that improved baroreflex sensitivity by antioxidants were mediated by improvement in autonomic function. Taken together, these data suggest that NADPH oxidase-derived reactive oxygen species are involved in the blunted baroreflex sensitivity in renovascular hypertension and that acute scavenging of superoxide restores baroreflex sensitivity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.autneu.2010.07.025 | DOI Listing |
Front Sports Act Living
December 2024
Geriatric Medicine Research, Dalhousie University & Nova Scotia Health, Halifax, NS, Canada.
Engaging in muscle strengthening activities (e.g., resistance training) at least twice/week is promoted by (Inter)national movement guidelines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Physiol
December 2024
Daniel Baugh Institute for Functional Genomics and Computational Biology, Department of Pathology and Genomic Medicine, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Loss of cardiac physiological function following myocardial infarction (MI) is accompanied by neural adaptations in the baroreflex that are compensatory in the short term, but then become associated with long-term disease progression. One marker of these adaptations is decreased baroreflex sensitivity, a strong predictor of post-MI mortality. The relative contributions of cardiac remodelling and neural adaptation in the sensory, central brainstem and peripheral ganglionic loci to baroreflex sensitivity changes remain underexplored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS Comput Biol
December 2024
Sano Centre for Computational Medicine, Cracow, Poland.
The baroreflex is one of the most important control mechanisms in the human cardiovascular system. This work utilises a closed-loop in silico model of baroreflex regulation, coupled to pulsatile mechanical models with (i) one heart chamber and 36-parameters and (ii) four chambers and 51 parameters. We perform the first global sensitivity analysis of these closed-loop systems which considers both cardiovascular and baroreflex parameters, and compare the models with their respective unregulated equivalents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Neurochir (Wien)
December 2024
Brain Physics Laboratory, Division of Neurosurgery, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Addenbrooke Hospital, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Background: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) can significantly disrupt autonomic nervous system (ANS) regulation, increasing the risk for secondary complications, hemodynamic instability, and adverse outcome. This retrospective study evaluated windowed time-lagged cross-correlation (WTLCC) matrices for describing cerebral hemodynamics-ANS interactions to predict outcome, enabling identifying high-risk patients who may benefit from enhanced monitoring to prevent complications.
Methods: The first experiment aimed to predict short-term outcome using WTLCC-based convolution neural network models on the Wroclaw University Hospital (WUH) database (P = 31 with 1,079 matrices, P = 16 with 573 matrices).
J Electrocardiol
November 2024
Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, IA, United States of America.
Neurocardiology is a broad interdisciplinary specialty investigating how the cardiovascular and nervous systems interact. In this brief introductory review, we describe several key aspects of this interaction with specific attention to cardiovascular effects. The review introduces basic anatomy and discusses physiological mechanisms and effects that play crucial roles in the interaction of the cardiovascular and nervous systems, namely: the cardiac neuraxis, the taxonomy of the nervous system, integration of sensory input in the brainstem, influences of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) on heart and vasculature, the neural pathways and functioning of the arterial baroreflex, receptors and ANS effects in the walls of blood vessels, receptors and ANS effects in excitable cells in the heart, ANS effects on heart rate and sympathovagal balance, endo-epicardial inhomogeneity, ANS effects with a balanced vagal and sympathetic stimulation, sympathovagal interaction, arterial baroreflex, baroreflex sensitivity and heart rate variability, arrhythmias and the arterial baroreflex, the cardiopulmonary baroreflex, the exercise pressor reflex, exercise-recovery hysteresis, mental stress, cardiac-cardiac reflexes, the cardiac sympathetic afferent reflex (CSAR), and neuromodulation.
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