Peripheral chemoreflex sensitivity and sympathetic nerve activity are normal in apnea divers during training season
Autor: | Jens Jordan, Vladimir Ivancev, Ivana Banic, Toni Breskovic, Zeljko Dujic |
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Rok vydání: | 2010 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Cardiac output Sympathetic Nervous System Time Factors Respiratory rate Apnea Diving Blood Pressure Young Adult Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience Heart Rate Reflex Heart rate medicine Humans Hypoxia Analysis of Variance Endocrine and Autonomic Systems business.industry Respiration medicine.disease Obstructive sleep apnea Blood pressure isocapnic hypoxia MSNA apnea breath holding training human Anesthesia Breathing Female Neurology (clinical) medicine.symptom Pulmonary Ventilation business human activities Respiratory minute volume |
Zdroj: | Autonomic Neuroscience. 154:42-47 |
ISSN: | 1566-0702 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.autneu.2009.11.001 |
Popis: | Apnea divers are exposed to repeated massive arterial oxygen desaturation, which could perturb chemoreflexes. An earlier study suggested that peripheral chemoreflex regulation of sympathetic vasomotor tone and ventilation may have recovered 4 or more weeks into the off season. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that peripheral chemoreflex regulation of ventilation and sympathetic vasomotor tone is present during the training season. We determined ventilation, heart rate, blood pressure, cardiac stroke volume, and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) during isocapnic hypoxia in 10 breath hold divers and 11 matched control subjects. The study was carried out at the end of the season of intense apnea trainings. Baseline MSNA frequency was 30+/-4bursts/min in control subjects and 25+/-4bursts/min in breath hold divers (P=0.053). During hypoxia burst frequency and total sympathetic activity increased similarly in both groups. Sympathetic activity normalized during the 30-minute recovery. Hypoxia-induced stimulation of minute ventilation was similar in both groups, although in divers it was maintained by higher tidal volumes and lower breathing frequency compared with control subjects. In both groups, hypoxia increased heart rate and cardiac output whereas total peripheral resistance decreased. Blood pressure remained unchanged. We conclude that peripheral chemoreflex regulation of ventilation and sympathetic vasomotor tone is paradoxically preserved in apnea divers, both, during the off and during the training season. The observation suggests that repeated arterial oxygen desaturation may not be sufficient explaining sympathetic reflex abnormalities similar to those in obstructive sleep apnea patients. Copyright © 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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