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Long-term heart transplant recipients: heart rate-related effects on augmented transfer function coherence during repeated squat-stand maneuvers in males.
- Source :
-
American Journal of Physiology: Regulatory, Integrative & Comparative Physiology . Dec2021, Vol. 321 Issue 6, pR925-R937. 13p. - Publication Year :
- 2021
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Abstract
- Previous research has highlighted that squat-stand maneuvers (SSMs) augment coherence values within the cerebral pressure- flow relationship to ~0.99. However, it is not fully elucidated if mean arterial pressure (MAP) leads to this physiological entrainment independently, or if heart rate (HR) and/or the partial pressure of carbon dioxide (PCO2) also have contributing influences. A 2:1 control-to-case model was used in the present investigation [participant number (n) = 40; n = 16 age-matched (AM); n = 16 donor control (DM); n = 8 heart transplant recipients (HTRs)]. The latter group was used to mechanistically isolate the extent to which HR influences the cerebral pressure-flow relationship. Participants completed 5 min of squat-stand maneuvers at 0.05 Hz (10 s) and 0.10 Hz (5 s). Linear transfer function analysis (TFA) examined the relationship between different physiological inputs (i.e., MAP, HR, and PCO2) and output [cerebral blood velocity (CBV)] during SSM; and cardiac baroreceptor sensitivity (BRS). Compared with DM, cardiac BRS was reduced in AM (P < 0.001), which was further reduced in HTR (P < 0.045). In addition, during the SSM, HR was elevated in HTR compared with both control groups (P < 0.001), but all groups had near-maximal coherence metrics ≥0.98 at 0.05 Hz and ≥0.99 at 0.10 Hz (P ≥0.399). In contrast, the mean HR-CBV/PCO2-CBV relationships ranged from 0.38 (HTR) to 0.81 (DM). Despite near abolishment of BRS and blunted HR following heart transplantation, long-term HTR exhibited near-maximal coherence within the MAP-CBV relationship, comparable with AM and DM. Therefore, these results show that the augmented coherence with SSM is driven by blood pressure, whereas elevations in TFA coherence as a result of HR contribution are likely correlational in nature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 03636119
- Volume :
- 321
- Issue :
- 6
- Database :
- Academic Search Index
- Journal :
- American Journal of Physiology: Regulatory, Integrative & Comparative Physiology
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 154092764
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.00177.2021