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Effect of clonidine on cardiac baroreflex delay in humans and rats

Authors :
Emil Toader
John M. Karemaker
Luc Quintin
Robin M. McAllen
Andrei Cividjian
Karel H. Wesseling
Medical Biology
Source :
American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology, 300(4), R949-R957. American Physiological Society
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

The delay τ between rising systolic blood pressure (SBP) and baroreflex bradycardia has been found to increase when vagal tone is low. The α2-agonist clonidine increases cardiac vagal tone, and this study tested how it affects τ. In eight conscious supine human volunteers clonidine (6 μg/kg po) reduced τ, assessed both by cross correlation baroreflex sensitivity and sequence methods (both P < 0.05). Experiments on urethane-anaesthetized rats reproduced the phenomenon and investigated the underlying mechanism. Heart rate (HR) responses to increasing SBP produced with an arterial balloon catheter showed reduced τ ( P < 0.05) after clonidine (100 μg/kg iv). The central latency of the reflex was unaltered, however, as shown by the unchanged timing with which antidromically identified cardiac vagal motoneurons (CVM) responded to the arterial pulse. Testing the latency of the HR response to brief electrical stimuli to the right vagus showed that this was also unchanged by clonidine. Nevertheless, vagal stimuli delivered at a fixed time in the cardiac cycle (triggered from the ECG R-wave) slowed HR with a 1-beat delay in the baseline state but a 0-beat delay after clonidine ( n = 5, P < 0.05). This was because clonidine lengthened the diastolic period, allowing the vagal volleys to arrive at the heart just in time to postpone the next beat. Calculations indicate that naturally generated CVM volleys in both humans and rats arrive around this critical time. Clonidine thus reduces τ not by changing central or efferent latencies but simply by slowing the heart.

Details

ISSN :
15221490 and 03636119
Volume :
300
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fc18fe747b7e1a5663907f4892095263