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Peripheral Resistance Baroreflex During Incremental Bicycle Ergometer Exercise: Characterization and Correlation With Cardiac Baroreflex

The arm of the baroreflex (BR) controlling peripheral resistances (PR), labeled as BR of PR (prBR), was characterized through an extension of the cardiac BR (cBR) sequence analysis. The method exploits recordings of skin blood flow (SBF) from the palm of the non-dominant hand via a laser Doppler flo...

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Autores principales: Porta, Alberto, Bari, Vlasta, Maria, Beatrice De, Cairo, Beatrice, Vaini, Emanuele, Malacarne, Mara, Pagani, Massimo, Lucini, Daniela
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5996055/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29922179
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2018.00688
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author Porta, Alberto
Bari, Vlasta
Maria, Beatrice De
Cairo, Beatrice
Vaini, Emanuele
Malacarne, Mara
Pagani, Massimo
Lucini, Daniela
author_facet Porta, Alberto
Bari, Vlasta
Maria, Beatrice De
Cairo, Beatrice
Vaini, Emanuele
Malacarne, Mara
Pagani, Massimo
Lucini, Daniela
author_sort Porta, Alberto
collection PubMed
description The arm of the baroreflex (BR) controlling peripheral resistances (PR), labeled as BR of PR (prBR), was characterized through an extension of the cardiac BR (cBR) sequence analysis. The method exploits recordings of skin blood flow (SBF) from the palm of the non-dominant hand via a laser Doppler flowmeter and of arterial pressure (AP) from the middle finger of the same hand via a plethysmographic device. PR was estimated beat-by-beat as the ratio of mean AP to mean SBF computed over the same heart period (HP). Peripheral resistances-diastolic arterial pressure (PR-DAP) sequences featuring simultaneous increases of PR and decreases of diastolic AP (DAP) or vice versa were identified and the slope of the regression line in the (DAP, PR) plane was taken as an estimate of prBR sensitivity (BRS(prBR)). The percentage of prBR sequences (SEQ%(prBR)) was taken as a measure of prBR involvement and the prBR effectiveness index (EI(prBR)) was computed as the fraction of DAP sequences capable to drive antiparallel PR variations. Analogous markers were computed over cBR from HP and systolic AP (SAP) variability [i.e., cBR sensitivity (BRS(cBR)), percentage of cBR sequences (SEQ%(cBR))(,) and effectiveness index of the cBR (EI(cBR))]. prBR and cBR were typified during incremental light-to-moderate bicycle ergometer exercise at 10, 20, and 30% of the maximum effort in 16 healthy subjects (aged from 22 to 58 years, six males). We found that: (i) BRS(cBR) decreased gradually with the challenge, while BRS(prBR) declined only at the heaviest workload; (ii) SEQ%(cBR) decreased solely at the lightest workload, while the decline of SEQ%(prBR) was significant regardless of the intensity of the challenge; (iii) EI(prBR) and EI(cBR) were not affected by exercise; (iv) after pooling together all the data regardless of the experimental conditions, BRS(prBR) and BRS(cBR) were uncorrelated, while SEQ%(cBR) and SEQ%(prBR) as well as EI(cBR) and EI(prBR), were significantly and positively correlated; (v) when the correlation between SEQ%(cBR) and SEQ%(prBR) and between EI(cBR) and EI(prBR) was assessed separately in each experimental condition, it was not systematically detected. This study suggests that prBR characterization provides information complementary to cBR that might be fruitfully exploited to improve patients’ risk stratification.
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spelling pubmed-59960552018-06-19 Peripheral Resistance Baroreflex During Incremental Bicycle Ergometer Exercise: Characterization and Correlation With Cardiac Baroreflex Porta, Alberto Bari, Vlasta Maria, Beatrice De Cairo, Beatrice Vaini, Emanuele Malacarne, Mara Pagani, Massimo Lucini, Daniela Front Physiol Physiology The arm of the baroreflex (BR) controlling peripheral resistances (PR), labeled as BR of PR (prBR), was characterized through an extension of the cardiac BR (cBR) sequence analysis. The method exploits recordings of skin blood flow (SBF) from the palm of the non-dominant hand via a laser Doppler flowmeter and of arterial pressure (AP) from the middle finger of the same hand via a plethysmographic device. PR was estimated beat-by-beat as the ratio of mean AP to mean SBF computed over the same heart period (HP). Peripheral resistances-diastolic arterial pressure (PR-DAP) sequences featuring simultaneous increases of PR and decreases of diastolic AP (DAP) or vice versa were identified and the slope of the regression line in the (DAP, PR) plane was taken as an estimate of prBR sensitivity (BRS(prBR)). The percentage of prBR sequences (SEQ%(prBR)) was taken as a measure of prBR involvement and the prBR effectiveness index (EI(prBR)) was computed as the fraction of DAP sequences capable to drive antiparallel PR variations. Analogous markers were computed over cBR from HP and systolic AP (SAP) variability [i.e., cBR sensitivity (BRS(cBR)), percentage of cBR sequences (SEQ%(cBR))(,) and effectiveness index of the cBR (EI(cBR))]. prBR and cBR were typified during incremental light-to-moderate bicycle ergometer exercise at 10, 20, and 30% of the maximum effort in 16 healthy subjects (aged from 22 to 58 years, six males). We found that: (i) BRS(cBR) decreased gradually with the challenge, while BRS(prBR) declined only at the heaviest workload; (ii) SEQ%(cBR) decreased solely at the lightest workload, while the decline of SEQ%(prBR) was significant regardless of the intensity of the challenge; (iii) EI(prBR) and EI(cBR) were not affected by exercise; (iv) after pooling together all the data regardless of the experimental conditions, BRS(prBR) and BRS(cBR) were uncorrelated, while SEQ%(cBR) and SEQ%(prBR) as well as EI(cBR) and EI(prBR), were significantly and positively correlated; (v) when the correlation between SEQ%(cBR) and SEQ%(prBR) and between EI(cBR) and EI(prBR) was assessed separately in each experimental condition, it was not systematically detected. This study suggests that prBR characterization provides information complementary to cBR that might be fruitfully exploited to improve patients’ risk stratification. Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-06-05 /pmc/articles/PMC5996055/ /pubmed/29922179 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2018.00688 Text en Copyright © 2018 Porta, Bari, De Maria, Cairo, Vaini, Malacarne, Pagani and Lucini. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Physiology
Porta, Alberto
Bari, Vlasta
Maria, Beatrice De
Cairo, Beatrice
Vaini, Emanuele
Malacarne, Mara
Pagani, Massimo
Lucini, Daniela
Peripheral Resistance Baroreflex During Incremental Bicycle Ergometer Exercise: Characterization and Correlation With Cardiac Baroreflex
title Peripheral Resistance Baroreflex During Incremental Bicycle Ergometer Exercise: Characterization and Correlation With Cardiac Baroreflex
title_full Peripheral Resistance Baroreflex During Incremental Bicycle Ergometer Exercise: Characterization and Correlation With Cardiac Baroreflex
title_fullStr Peripheral Resistance Baroreflex During Incremental Bicycle Ergometer Exercise: Characterization and Correlation With Cardiac Baroreflex
title_full_unstemmed Peripheral Resistance Baroreflex During Incremental Bicycle Ergometer Exercise: Characterization and Correlation With Cardiac Baroreflex
title_short Peripheral Resistance Baroreflex During Incremental Bicycle Ergometer Exercise: Characterization and Correlation With Cardiac Baroreflex
title_sort peripheral resistance baroreflex during incremental bicycle ergometer exercise: characterization and correlation with cardiac baroreflex
topic Physiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5996055/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29922179
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2018.00688
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