Effects of dynamic and static neck suction on muscle nerve sympathetic activity, heart rate and blood pressure in man.
- 1 February 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 311 (1) , 551-564
- https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1981.sp013604
Abstract
Vasoconstrictor sympathetic activity in peroneal muscle fascicles, blood pressure and heart rate were recorded in 12 subjects while stimulating carotid sinus receptors by continuous or sinusoidal (cycle durations 7.5, 15 and 30 s) neck suction. Neural activity, quantified by counting the number of pulse synchronous sympathetic bursts (burst incidence), was correlated to the pressure sensed by carotid sinus receptors (= calculated diastolic transmural carotid pressure) and to pressure sensed by arterial baroreceptors not located in the neck (= diastolic blood pressure). Sinusoidal neck suction induced rhythmical modulation of sympathetic activity which became less noticeable with increasing cycle duration. Static suction led to a non-significant reduction of sympathetic burst incidence. With sinusoidal stimuli the amplitude of the transmural carotid pressure variations were maximal at a cycle duration of 7.5 s and decreased successively at cycles of 15 and 30 s. Amplitudes of induced variations in R-R intervals in the ECG changed in a similar way but in contrast induced variations in diastolic blood pressure were minimal at a cycle duration of 7.5 s and maximal at 15 s. The main rate limiting factors for the blood pressure responses apparently is the sluggishness of the peripheral vascular beds. Sinusoidal neck suction always prolonged mean R-R interval. This stimulus increased mean burst incidence in subjects with few bursts at rest and decreased burst incidence in subjects with many bursts at rest. These changes of burst incidence were linearly related to the increases of R-R intervals. Inter-individual differences in balance between cardiac and peripheral vasoconstrictor responses to changes of baroreceptor activity are demonstrated. Fast changes in carotid sinus pressure effectively modulate sympathetic outflow to the muscles and evidently contribute to transient compensatory blood pressure responses. Static blood pressure control probably depends more on baroreceptor control over other effector organs.This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
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