1. MSNA during prolonged post-faint hypotension
- Author
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Berend E. Westerhof, David L. Jardine, Wouter Wieling, I. K. Schon, Chris Frampton, J. Rozenberg, General Internal Medicine, and Other departments
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Neurology ,Clinical Neurology ,Hemodynamics ,Vasodilation ,Sympathetic withdrawal ,Diabetes mellitus ,Syncope, Vasovagal ,medicine ,Humans ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Retrospective Studies ,Cardiac output (CO) ,Vagal outflow ,Endocrine and Autonomic Systems ,business.industry ,Sympathetic nerve activity ,Prolonged post faint hypotension (PPFH) ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Peripheral ,Blood pressure ,Autonomic Nervous System Diseases ,Anesthesia ,Female ,Muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) ,Neurology (clinical) ,Hypotension ,Total peripheral resistance (TPR) ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
Following tilt-induced syncope, blood pressure usually recovers rapidly after tilt back to the horizontal position. However, in some patients, hemodynamic recovery is delayed, a condition recently termed "prolonged post-faint hypotension" (PPFH). The mechanism is thought to be mediated by increased vagal outflow rather than exaggerated peripheral vasodilatation and sympathetic withdrawal. To date, no muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) recordings have been reported in this condition, so we aimed to confirm that neither vasodilatation nor MSNA withdrawal was responsible. To retrospectively select patients with satisfactory recordings of continuous BP and MSNA during tilt-induced syncope. To compare hemodynamic and MSNA profiles in patients with PPFH to patients with normal recovery (NR) after tilt-back. All patients were studied in Christchurch, New Zealand, between 1998 and 2008 using continuous arterial BP monitoring, and microneurographic recordings of MSNA from the right leg. Only patients with satisfactory BP and MSNA data throughout baseline, head-up tilt and presyncope were selected. Stroke volume (SV), cardiac output (CO), and total peripheral resistance (TPR) were derived using Modelflow. After baseline measurements, patients were tilted to the head-up 60A degrees position and given GTN spray if asymptomatic after 20 min. Following the onset of presyncope, patients were tilted slowly back to the horizontal. PPFH was defined as systolic BP
- Published
- 2012
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