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Mathematical modeling of gravitational effects on the circulation: importance of the time course of venous pooling and blood volume changes in the lungs

Authors :
Janneke Gisolf
Wim J. Stok
S. Dijkstra
John M. Karemaker
K. van Heusden
Medical Biology
Source :
American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology, 291(5), H2152-H2165. American Physiological Society
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

A dip in blood pressure (BP) in response to head-up tilt (HUT) or active standing might be due to rapid pooling in the veins below the heart (preload) or muscle activation-induced drop in systemic vascular resistance (afterload). We hypothesized that, in the cardiovascular response to passive HUT, where, in contrast to active standing, little BP dip is observed, features affecting the preload play a key role. We developed a baroreflex model combined with a lumped-parameter model of the circulation, including viscoelastic stress-relaxation of the systemic veins. Cardiac contraction is modeled using the varying-elastance concept. Gravity affects not only the systemic, but also the pulmonary, circulation. In accordance with the experimental results, model simulations do not show a BP dip on HUT; the tilt-back response is also realistic. If it is assumed that venous capacities are steady-state values, the introduction of stress-relaxation initially reduces venous pooling. The resulting time course of venous pooling is comparable to measured impedance changes. When venous pressure-volume dynamics are neglected, rapid (completed within 30 s) venous pooling leads to a drop in BP. The direct effect of gravity on the pulmonary circulation influences the BP response in the first ∼5 s after HUT and tilt back. In conclusion, the initial BP response to HUT is mainly determined by the response of the venous system. The time course of lower body pooling is essential in understanding the response to passive HUT.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03636135
Volume :
291
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c032c138e04e88a39f57b5593fc738c0
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.01268.2004