Spontaneous cardiac baroreceptor reflex and regional circulations in conscious rats

OBJECTIVETo determine the relationships between the activity of the spontaneous cardiac baroreceptor reflex (BRX) and regional vascular dynamics in conscious unrestrained rats DESIGNSimultaneous beat-to-beat recordings of blood pressure and measurements of indices of mesenteric and hindquarters bloo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hypertension 1996-07, Vol.14 (7), p.865-869
Hauptverfasser: Ducher, Michel, Zhang, Zhi-Qi, Cerutti, Catherine, Julien, Claude, Gustin, Marie-Paule, Paultre, Christian Z
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:OBJECTIVETo determine the relationships between the activity of the spontaneous cardiac baroreceptor reflex (BRX) and regional vascular dynamics in conscious unrestrained rats DESIGNSimultaneous beat-to-beat recordings of blood pressure and measurements of indices of mesenteric and hindquarters blood flows were performed in seven male normotensive conscious rats under baseline conditions during 1 h METHODSThe relationships between systolic blood pressure (SBP) and heart rate were examined using a computerized method, giving the degree of statistical dependence between values of the two parameters with the Z coefficient. This analysis permitted detection of cardiac beats related to cardiac BRX activity. Z analysis was also applied to SBP and to mesenteric or hindquarters blood flow or vascular resistance. Time-series representations were used to describe the chronological patterns corresponding to BRX spontaneous activity RESULTSIn these rats, which presented spontaneous BRX like patterns manifested by the Z analysis, BRX was active during approximately 15% of the time. For 80% of these patterns, cardiac BRX acted to buffer falls in SBP. These depressor events were preceded by muscular vasodilations whereas vasodilations in the mesentery were delayed. Z analysis of these spontaneous haemodynamic patterns confirmed that muscular vasodilations were strongly associated with falls in SBP, whereas vasodilations lagged behind SBP by about seven beats and were not dependent on simultaneous SBP values CONCLUSIONSThe Z method showed that spontaneous hindquarters vasodilations were associated with cardiac BRX patterns and that mesenteric vasodilations were not concomitant with falls in SBP and may be the consequence either of a delayed central response or of a local mechanism such as myogenic autoregulation
ISSN:0263-6352
1473-5598
DOI:10.1097/00004872-199607000-00009