Baroreflex responsiveness in borderline hypertensives: a study with neostigmine
- 1 August 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Cardiovascular Research
- Vol. 15 (8) , 436-442
- https://doi.org/10.1093/cvr/15.8.436
Abstract
The baroreflex response to changes in transmural pressure throughout the arterial tree or limited to the carotid sinus was evaluated in ten borderline hypertensives and compared with that observed in ten normal subjects and in ten established hypertensives. Baroreceptor sensitivity was tested by evaluating both heart rate response to phenylephrine-induced increase in arterial pressure and heart rate and blood pressure changes induced by increased neck tissue pressure by means of a neck chamber. The heart rate response to phenylephrine (evaluated by the regression of the R-R interval versus the systolic blood pressure) was depressed both in borderline and established hypertensives as compared with controls. Similarly, the heart rate and the pressor response to increased neck tissue pressure were depressed in both groups of hypertensives. In borderline, but not in established hypertensives, neostigmine administration improved consistently the pressor baroreflex response to increased neck tissue pressure and the heart rate reflex response to both the employed stimuli. These findings indicate that a reduced parasympathetic activity is one of the components involved in the altered baroreflex sensitivity in borderline hypertensives.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Carotid baroreflex function in young men with borderline blood pressure elevation.Circulation, 1979
- Baroreceptor reflexes in human hypertension.Circulation Research, 1978
- Effects of propranolol on baroreflex sensitivity in borderline hypertensionCardiovascular Research, 1978
- Circulatory reflexes from carotid and extracarotid baroreceptor areas in man.Circulation Research, 1977
- The Variable-Pressure Neck-Chamber Method for Studying the Carotid Baroreflex in ManClinical Science, 1977
- Modulation of carotid baroreflex responsiveness in man: effects of posture and propranololJournal of Applied Physiology, 1976
- Relative importance of the carotid and aortic baroreceptors in the reflex control of heart rateAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1968
- Observations on the excitation by acetylcholine and by pressure of sensory receptors in the cat's carotid sinusThe Journal of Physiology, 1955