Autonomic responses of women with parental hypertension. Effects of physical activity and fitness.
- 1 November 1994
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Hypertension
- Vol. 24 (5) , 576-584
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.hyp.24.5.576
Abstract
We studied the moderating effects of cardiorespiratory fitness and physical activity on heart rate and blood pressure responses to psychophysiological stressors and the carotid-cardiac baroreflex in young normotensive women with a parental history of hypertension (n = 31). Testing occurred during the follicular menstrual phase. Subjects were divided into high versus moderate (46.6 +/- 6.5 versus 35.9 +/- 1.9 mL.kg-1.min-1) VO2peak and high versus moderate (1217.7 +/- 98.4 versus 1015.5 +/- 49.4 J.kg-1.wk-1) physical activity groups. The groups did not differ in heart rate or blood pressure responses to mental arithmetic or the cold-face test. However, the highly fit women had longer maximal R-R intervals compared with the moderately fit women when the carotid-cardiac baroreflex was stimulated by negative pressures applied to the neck during resting conditions (P < .01). The carotid-cardiac baroreflex was attenuated during mental arithmetic compared with rest in both the moderately fit and moderately active women but not in the highly fit and highly active groups. We find no evidence that aerobic fitness reduces sympathetic responses to laboratory stressors in young women with parental hypertension. Our findings are consistent with greater parasympathetic tone during sympathetic challenge for the highly fit and highly active subjects. Clarification of autonomic balance during carotid baroreflex stimulation at rest and during sympathetic challenge after exercise training would provide important information regarding mechanisms that regulate cardiovascular responses to autonomic challenge in women at risk for hypertension.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Maximal oxygen intake and nomographic assessment of functional aerobic impairment in cardiovascular diseasePublished by Elsevier ,2004
- Comparison of 24-hour parasympathetic activity in endurance-trained and untrained young menJournal of the American College of Cardiology, 1992
- Sympathetic nervous system and behavioral responses to stress following exercise trainingPhysiology & Behavior, 1992
- Mental stress increases sympathetic nerve activity during sustained baroreceptor stimulation in humans.Hypertension, 1991
- Menstrual Cycle Phase is a Potential Confound in Psychophysiology ResearchPsychophysiology, 1990
- Comparison of finger and intra-arterial blood pressure monitoring at rest and during laboratory testing.Hypertension, 1989
- Race, Parental History of Hypertension, and Patterns of Cardiovascular Reactivity in WomenPsychophysiology, 1989
- Consequences of impaired arterial baroreflexes in essential hypertension: effects on pressor responses, plasma noradrenaline and blood pressure variabilityJournal Of Hypertension, 1988
- Stimulus-Specific Patterns of Cardiovascular Reactivity in Type A and B Subjects: Evidence for Enhanced Vagal Reactivity in Type BPsychophysiology, 1988
- Cardiovascular response to mental stress in normal adolescents with hypertensive parents. Hemodynamics and mental stress in adolescents.Hypertension, 1979