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Altered firing pattern of single-unit muscle sympathetic nerve activity during handgrip exercise in chronic heart failure

Authors :
Hisayoshi, Murai
Masayuki, Takamura
Michirou, Maruyama
Manabu, Nakano
Tatsunori, Ikeda
Daisuke, Kobayashi
Kan-ichi, Otowa
Hiroshi, Ootsuji
Masaki, Okajima
Hiroshi, Furusho
Shigeo, Takata
Shuichi, Kaneko
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Blackwell Science Inc, 2009.

Abstract

Sympathetic activation in chronic heart failure (CHF) is greatly augmented at rest but the response to exercise remains controversial. We previously demonstrated that single-unit muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) provides a more detailed description of the sympathetic response to physiological stress than multi-unit nerve recordings. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the reflex response and discharge properties of single-unit MSNA are altered during handgrip exercise (HG, 30% of maximum voluntary contraction for 3 min) in CHF patients (New York Heart Association functional class II or III, n = 16) compared with age-matched healthy control subjects (n = 13). At rest, both single-unit and multi-unit indices of sympathetic outflow were augmented in CHF compared with controls (P0.05). However, the percentage of cardiac intervals that contained one, two, three or four single-unit spikes were not different between the groups. Compared to the control group, HG elicited a larger increase in multi-unit total MSNA (Delta1002 +/- 50 compared with Delta636 +/- 76 units min(-1), P0.05) and single-unit MSNA spike incidence (Delta27 +/- 5 compared with Delta8 +/- 2 spikes (100 heart beats)(-1)), P0.01) in the CHF patients. More importantly, the percentage of cardiac intervals that contained two or three single-unit spikes was increased (P0.05) during exercise in the CHF group only (Delta8 +/- 2% and Delta5 +/- 1% for two and three spikes, respectively). These results suggest that the larger multi-unit total MSNA response observed during HG in CHF is brought about in part by an increase in the probability of multiple firing of single-unit sympathetic neurones.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....d580d3bfd5717808bcac1bee237cda15