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Articles in PresS. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol (December 4, 2009). doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00908.2009 1 Progressive Muscle Metaboreflex Activation Gradually Decreases 2 Spontaneous Heart Rate Baroreflex Sensitivity During Dynamic Exercise 3 4 Javier A. Sala-Mercado1,3, Masashi Ichinose1,4,5, Matthew Coutsos1, Zhenhua 5 Li1,7, Dominic Fano1, Tomoko Ichinose1,6, Elizabeth Dawe2 and Donal S. 6 O'Leary1 7 Departments of Physiology1, Surgical Research Services2& Cardiovascular 8 Research Institute3, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, 9 Michigan, USA 10 Human Integrative Physiology Laboratory4, School of Business Administration, 11 Meiji University, Tokyo, Japan 12 Laboratory for Applied Human Physiology5, Faculty of Human Development, 13 Kobe University, Kobe, Japan 14 Laboratory for Human Performance Research6, Osaka International University, 15 Osaka, Japan 16 Department of Cardiology7, Qilu Hospital of Shandong University, Shandong, 17 China 18 Direct Correspondence to: 19 Donal S. O’Leary, Ph.D. 20 Department of Physiology 21 Wayne State University School of Medicine 22 540 East Canfield Ave. 23 Detroit, MI 48201 24 (313) 577-5494 Fax 25 (313) 577-1540 Phone 26 [email protected] 27 28 Running Head: Muscle-metaboreflex modulation of baroreflex sensitivity. 29 30 Key Words: Exercise reflexes, Pressor response, Arterial baroreflex sensitivity. 31 Copyright © 2009 by the American Physiological Society. 2 32 33 ABSTRACT Ischemia of active skeletal muscle elicits a pressor response termed the 34 muscle metaboreflex. We tested the hypothesis that in normal dogs during 35 dynamic exercise, graded muscle metaboreflex activation (MMA) would 36 progressively attenuate spontaneous heart rate baroreflex sensitivity (SBRS). 37 The animals were chronically instrumented to measure heart rate (HR), cardiac 38 output (CO), mean and systolic arterial pressure (MAP,SAP) and left ventricular 39 systolic pressures (LVSP) at rest and during mild or moderate treadmill exercise 40 before and during progressive MMA [via graded reductions of hindlimb blood 41 flow (HLBF)]. SBRS (slopes of the linear relationships (LRs) between HR and 42 LVSP or SAP during spontaneous sequences of ≥ 3 consecutive beats when HR 43 changed inversely vs. pressure) decreased during mild exercise from the resting 44 values (-5.56 ± 0.86 vs. -2.67 ± 0.50 bpm/mmHg, P <0.05) and in addition these 45 LRs were shifted upwards. Progressive MMA gradually and linearly increased 46 MAP, CO, and HR and linearly decreased SBRS and shifted LRs upward and 47 rightward to higher heart rates and pressures denoting baroreflex resetting. 48 Moderate exercise caused a substantial reduction in SBRS (-1.57 ± 0.38 49 bpm/mmHg, P <0.05) and both an upward and rightward resetting. Gradual 3 50 MMA at this higher workload also caused significant progressive increases in 51 MAP, CO and HR and progressive decreases in SBRS and the LRs were shifted 52 to higher MAP and HR. Our results demonstrate that gradual MMA during mild 53 and moderate dynamic exercise progressively decreases SBRS. In addition, 54 baroreflex control of HR is progressively reset to higher blood pressure and HR 55 in proportion to the extent of MMA. 4 56 57 INTRODUCTION Whole body dynamic exercise can elicit profound changes in autonomic 58 activity. Two negative feedback reflexes implicated in mediating these 59 responses are the arterial baroreflex and the muscle metaboreflex, which 60 negates perturbations in arterial pressure and blood flow to active skeletal 61 muscle, respectively (34-36). The arterial baroreflex operates via modulation of 62 both cardiac and peripheral vascular function, but does so with markedly 63 different time courses. The buffering of rapid (seconds) changes in arterial 64 pressure occurs via rapid, parasympathetically induced changes in heart rate 65 which usually elicits proportional changes in cardiac output (CO). 66 showed that virtually all of the initial compensatory responses to transient 67 activation of the carotid sinus baroreceptors are due to reflex changes in cardiac 68 output (25). In contrast, as the baroreflex perturbation is maintained past the 69 initial few seconds, most of the reflex changes in arterial pressure now occur via 70 changes in the peripheral vasculature (25; 27). Ogoh et al. 71 This time-dependant difference in baroreflex mechanisms extends from 72 rest through heavy whole body dynamic exercise as the baroreflex is 73 progressively reset to a higher pressure as workload rises (5; 6; 20; 32). 5 74 Activation of skeletal muscle afferents may be a key factor involved in this 75 resetting (8; 11; 13; 17; 28; 30; 33). Recently, several groups have investigated 76 baroreflex control of heart rate using the spontaneous baroreflex technique (3; 4; 77 15; 26; 37; 48). This technique takes advantage of spontaneously occurring 78 fluctuations in arterial pressure and the resultant baroreflex-mediated changes in 79 heart rate. 80 parasympathetic activity (10; 12). 81 baroreflex sensitivity (HR-SBRS) technique our group has recently observed that 82 during dynamic exercise, muscle metaboreflex activation (MMA) causes not only 83 resetting of the arterial baroreflex but also a decrease in HR-SBRS (40). In our 84 study we activated the muscle metaboreflex via imposing a set decrease in 85 skeletal muscle blood flow to the hindlimbs in running dogs (~50% during mild 86 exercise and ~30% during moderate exercise). 87 decreases in skeletal muscle blood flow were clearly sufficient to activate the 88 muscle metaboreflex, previous studies using this or similar preparations have 89 shown that the magnitude of the metaboreflex pressor response is proportional 90 to the extent of decrease in skeletal muscle blood flow (14; 43; 49). When the 91 metaboreflex is activated, quite linear increases in arterial pressure, heart rate, These rapid baroreflex responses occur solely via changes in Employing this spontaneous heart rate While these imposed 6 92 and cardiac output occur with progressive further decreases in skeletal muscle 93 blood flow. Whether resetting of the baroreflex and decreases in HR-SBRS 94 occur proportionately with progressive MMA is unknown. 95 whether there is a threshold level of MMA for effects on the baroreflex, whether 96 the effects on the baroreflex saturate at a certain level of MMA, and whether 97 there are differential effects of MMA on baroreflex resetting vs. the effects on 98 reduced HR-SBRS. The purpose of the present study was to directly address 99 these questions in normal dogs during mild and moderate dynamic exercise. We 100 hypothesized that graded MMA would progressively reset the arterial baroreflex 101 and attenuate HR-SBRS in direct proportion to the extent of MMA. Also unknown is 102 103 MATERIALS AND METHODS 104 Experiments were performed on seven adult, mongrel dogs (weight 105 ~20-25 kg) of either gender (four males, three females). The protocols 106 employed in the present study were reviewed and approved by the Wayne State 107 University Animal Investigation Committee and conform with the United States 108 National Institute of Health guide lines. 109 Surgical Preparation and Procedures 7 110 Upon arrival to the laboratory, all animals were accustomed to human 111 handling and during ~10 sessions individually trained to comfortably run freely 112 on a motor-driven treadmill at different speeds. 113 successfully trained to run on the treadmill, two surgical procedures were 114 performed on each animal (left thoracotomy & left flank abdominal surgery 115 separated by at least 10 days). 116 Once the animals were Prior to each surgery, for tranquilization, the animals received an 117 intramuscular injection of acepromazine (0.2 mg/kg). 118 anesthetized with sodium thiopental (25 mg/kg, i.v.). Following endotracheal 119 intubation, anesthesia was maintained with isoflurane gas (1-3%). Prior to the 120 surgery, the animals received: cefazolin, (antibiotic, 500 mg, intravenously), 121 carprofen (analgesic, 2.0 mg/kg intravenously), buprenorphine (analgesic, 0.1 122 mg/kg intramuscularly), and a 72 hour trans-dermal fentanyl patch was applied 123 (analgesic, dose 125-175 µg per hour). In addition, before the left thoracotomy, 124 selective 125 hydrochloride (2.0 mg/kg). 126 received a second intravenous dose of cefazolin (500 mg i.v.) and antibiotics 127 were continued for the length of the experimental protocol at an oral dose of intercostal nerve blocks were performed The dogs were with bupivacaine Following each surgical procedure, the dogs 8 128 cephalexin 30 mg/kg/12hrs to prevent infections. Moreover, after each surgical 129 procedure, for the following 12 hours buprenorphine and acepromazine were 130 administered (0.05 mg/kg, and 0.5 mg/kg respectively i.v.) as needed to control 131 any type of discomfort. 132 mg/kg/day) for ten days. 133 In the first surgical procedure under sterile conditions, a left thoracotomy (fourth 134 intercostal space) was performed. A fully implantable telemetered blood 135 pressure transducer (Model PAD-70, Data Sciences International) was placed 136 subcutaneously 10 cm caudal to the thoracotomy incision. Its catheter was 137 tunneled into the thoracic cavity through the 7th intercostal space and located 138 inside the left ventricle for measuring left ventricular pressure (LVP). In order to 139 measure CO a 20-mm blood flow transducer (Transonic Systems Inc.) was 140 placed around the ascending aorta. For studies unrelated to the present 141 investigation, three stainless steel ventricular pacing electrodes (O-Flexon, 142 Ethicon Inc.) were sutured to the right ventricular free wall, vascular occluders 143 were placed on the superior and inferior venous cava and two pairs of 144 sonomicrometry crystals were placed on the left ventricular endocardium. The 145 pericardium was re-approximated loosely and the chest was closed in layers. Thereafter, carprofen was administered orally (4 9 146 After at least 10 days (recovery period) a second surgical procedure (left 147 abdominal retroperitoneal surgery) was performed on each dog. A 10-mm 148 blood flow transducer (Transonic Systems Inc.) was placed on the terminal aorta 149 for measuring hindlimb blood flow (HLBF). All side branches between the iliac 150 arteries and the flow probe were ligated and severed and two 10-mm vascular 151 occluders (DocXS Biomedical Products) were placed on the terminal aorta distal 152 to the flow probe in order for us to reduce flow to the hindlimbs during the 153 experients (via partial external inflation) and elicit the muscle metaboreflex. 154 addition, a catheter was placed in a lumbar side branch of the aorta above the 155 flow probe and occluders to monitor arterial pressure. All flow probe cables, 156 pacing wires, vascular occluder tubings’, and the aortic catheter were tunneled 157 subcutaneously and exteriorized between the scapulae at the end of its 158 corresponding surgical procedure. 159 Experimental procedures 160 All experiments were performed individually and after the animals had fully 161 recovered from the surgeries and were alert, active, afebrile, and of good 162 appetite. After the animals had fully recovered from the instrumentation and 163 before an experiment for data collection was performed every animal was In 10 164 re-familiarized (~5 times) to run on the motor-driven treadmill. Before each 165 experiment, one animal was brought to the laboratory and allowed to roam freely 166 for ~20 minutes. The animal was then directed to the treadmill. The CO and 167 HLBF probes were connected to a flow meter (Transonic Systems Inc.). The 168 arterial catheter was connected to a pressure transducer (Transpac IV, Abbott 169 Laboratories), the LVP telemetered signal was calibrated and heart rate (HR) 170 was computed by a cardiotachometer triggered by the CO signal. 171 recorded on analog to digital recording systems for subsequent offline analyses. 172 For a given experimental session, data were collected at rest and then at a 173 randomly selected workload (mild exercise: 3.2 km h-1, 0% grade elevation or 174 moderate exercise: 6.4 km h-1, 10% grade elevation which causes CO to 175 increase to ~ 40 and 70% of maximal levels (1)). Every animal successfully 176 performed both experimental protocols (mild exercise & moderate exercise) on 177 different days as only one workload was performed per experimental day. All 178 animals ran freely with only positive verbal encouragement. Steady-state data 179 were recorded at rest while the animal was standing on the treadmill, during 180 exercise (at either mild or moderate workload) with unrestricted blood flow to the 181 hindlimbs and after graded reductions of HLBF (via partial inflations of the All data were 11 182 terminal aortic occluders) in order to elicit gradual metaboreflex activation. Each 183 level of reduction in hindlimb perfusion was maintained until all parameters 184 reached steady state (3-5 min). 185 Data analysis 186 Beat-to-beat CO, HLBF, heart rate (HR), mean arterial pressure (MAP) 187 and LVP, were continuously collected during each experiment. Stroke volume 188 (SV) was calculated as CO/HR. As previously stated, data were recorded for 3 189 to 5 steady state minutes at standing rest, free-flow exercise (mild or moderate) 190 and at each level of HLBF (each reduction) so that each period spanned multiple 191 respiratory cycles. Since left ventricular systolic pressure (LVSP) is virtually 192 identical to systolic pressure in the aortic arch, we used LVSP as the input to the 193 arterial baroreflex. 194 assessed by analysing the beat-to-beat relationship between HR and LVSP as 195 previously described (40). Briefly, the beat-to-beat time series of LVSP and HR 196 were searched for three or more consecutive beats in which the LVSP and HR of 197 the following beat changed in opposite direction (i.e., -HR/+LVSP and 198 +HR/-LVSP). 199 linear regression was applied to each individual sequence and only those Spontaneous baroreflex control of HR was dynamically These sequences were identified as baroreflex sequences. A 12 200 sequences in which r2 was > 0.85 were accepted and subsequently a slope was 201 calculated. 202 averaging all slopes computed within a given test period, was calculated and 203 taken as a measure of spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity for that period. 204 Sinoaortic baroreflex denervation virtually abolishes baroreflex sensitivity 205 assessed via this method indicating that these spontaneous reciprocal HR 206 changes that occur as a result of changes in arterial pressure are mediated by 207 the baroreflex (3; 16). The mean slope of the LVSP-HR relationship, obtained by 208 The nonlinear patterns of the hemodynamic and HR-SBRS responses to 209 graded reductions in HLBF were analyzed by plotting the variable (e.g., MAP) 210 versus HLBF during free-flow exercise and at each level of partial vascular 211 occlusion as shown in figure 1. As described in detail previously (44; 45; 49), 212 during mild exercise initial reductions in hindlimb perfusion do not elicit 213 metaboreflex responses; however, once hindlimb perfusion is reduced below a 214 threshold level, a pressor response occurs. The threshold was approximated 215 as the intersection between two regression lines, the initial response line in 216 which no reflex responses occurred during the initial reductions in hindlimb 217 perfusion and the pressor response line in which further reductions in hindlimb 13 218 perfusion elicited a reflex pressor response. During moderate exercise, often 219 no apparent threshold exists and the initial reduction in hindlimb perfusion elicits 220 reflex responses. 221 ascribed as the free-flow value of hindlimb perfusion. 222 Statistical analysis If no threshold was apparent, then the threshold was 223 Utilizing the averaged responses for each animal, statistical analyses 224 were performed with Systat software (Systat 11.0). An α-level of P < 0.05 was 225 set to determine statistical significance. 226 repeated measures was used for comparing hemodynamic data obtained at rest 227 and during exercise under free-flow conditions, at threshold and at maximal 228 levels of HLBF reduction during mild and moderate workloads. If a significant 229 interaction term was found, a Test for Simple Effects post hoc analysis 230 (C-Matrix) was performed to determine significant group mean differences. We 231 compared the slope of the linear regression line between HR-SBRS and HLBF 232 after threshold between mild and moderate exercise using a paired t-test. Data 233 are expressed as mean ± SE. 234 RESULTS One-way Analysis of Variance for 14 235 Figure 2 shows data from one animal during both protocols (mild and 236 moderate exercise). From rest to mild exercise, the relationship between HR 237 and LVSP was shifted upwards and the linear relationship was less steep which 238 represents a decrease in SBRS. 239 aorta and imposed reductions in hindlimb blood flow, no metaboreflex pressor 240 response was engaged and there was little change in the HR-LVSP relationship 241 and hence HR-SBRS remained essentially constant. However, once HLBF 242 was reduced below the metaboreflex threshold, HR and blood pressure 243 increased. With the generation of the pressor response, there was a 244 progressive shifting of the HR-LVSP relationship upwards and to the right and 245 the slope progressively flattened. This resulted in a quite linear relationship 246 between HR-SBRS and HLBF as the metaboreflex became progressively more 247 engaged. Similar responses were observed during moderate exercise with 248 even more pronounced falls in HR-SBRS to ~ 20% of resting levels at maximal 249 metaboreflex activation. At both workloads, the decrease in the strength of 250 HR-SBRS was linearly related to the reduction in hindlimb blood flow over the 251 entire range of metaboreflex activation. As we have previously shown (40), 252 neither exercise nor metaboreflex activation affected the number of SBRS With the initial partial occlusion of the terminal 15 253 occurances observed per minute (Rest-8.3 ± 1.8; mild exercise – 8.5 ± 1.3; mild 254 exercise+MMA – 10.3 ± 1.8; moderate exercise – 8.3 ± 1.0; moderate exercise + 255 MMA – 9.5 ± 2.2, ANOVA P > 0.05) 256 Figure 3 shows HR, SV, CO, MAP, LVSP and HR-SBRS at rest, during 257 mild and moderate exercise without any imposed reductions in HLBF (free flow), 258 at threshold and ~ maximum activation of the muscle metaboreflex. As 259 expected and in agreement with previous studies (41; 42) from rest to mild 260 exercise while MAP and LVSP did not change significantly, we observed 261 increases in HR and SV (as a result in CO), and also a rise in hindlimb blood flow. 262 Thus, the increase in CO is offset by a rise in total vascular conductance due to 263 the active vasodilation in the exercising skeletal muscles, resulting in little 264 change in MAP. In addition, a substantial decrease in HR-SBRS occurred 265 when compared with standing rest. Muscle metaboreflex activation at this 266 workload generated a progressive rise in MAP and LVSP, a significant 267 tachycardia, a small rise in SV, and thus, CO substantially increased. 268 Moreover, muscle metaboreflex activation during mild exercise caused 269 considerable changes in HR-SBRS with a pattern very similar to the changes 270 induced in most other hemodynamic parameters. That is, a clear threshold 16 271 existed for the effects on HR-SBRS and the changes progressed linearly with 272 progressive reductions in HLBF and did not saturate despite marked reductions 273 in HLBF which were the maximal we could impose and obtain steady-state data. 274 Similar results were observed during moderate exercise with the exception that 275 the prevailing level of HLBF was much closer to metaboreflex threshold (and no 276 threshold was observed in some experiments). Again, the pattern of the 277 changes HR-SBRS with metaboreflex activation mirrored those that occurred in 278 most hemodynamic parameters (e.g. HR, CO, MAP, LVSP). Table 1 shows the 279 average slope (of all animals) of the linear regression line during mild and 280 moderate exercise between HLBF and HR-SBRS. The average slope after 281 muscle metaboreflex threshold during mild exercise was ~ -4.15 meaning that 282 for every l/min decrease in HLBF beyond metaboreflex threshold, HR-SBRS 283 decreased 4.15 bpm/mmHg. The high value of the correlation coefficient 284 indicates a very close linear relationship between these two variables. 285 Moreover, although the slope was significantly reduced during moderate 286 exercise, there was still a very close relationship between HLBF and HR-SBRS 287 as shown by a high correlation coefficient value in this condition. 17 288 To compare whether the effects of muscle metaboreflex activation on 289 spontaneous baroreflex control of heart rate occurred concurrently with the 290 effects of the muscle metaboreflex on the other hemodynamic parameters, we 291 compared the HLBF at metaboreflex threshold which is separately calculated for 292 each of the variables. Figure 4 shows that at either workload, there was no 293 significant difference in hindlimb blood flow at the calculated MMA threshold for 294 HR-SBRS, HR, CO, LVSP and MAP, indicating that the muscle metaboreflex 295 modulates the heart, blood pressure and the baroreflex in concert. 296 for each experiment, the relationship between HR-SBRS and LVSP beyond 297 metaboreflex threshold was also quite linear at both workloads (Figure 5). On 298 average, HR-SBRS decreased ~10% for every 10 mmHg increase in LVSP 299 during steady-state metaboreflex activation at both workloads. In addition, 300 301 DISCUSSION 302 To our knowledge, this is the first study to show that 1) graded muscle 303 metaboreflex activation during dynamic exercise not only progressively resets 304 the arterial baroreflex operating point, but also gradually decreases spontaneous 305 heart rate baroreflex sensitivity in direct proportion to the extent of muscle 306 metaboreflex activation; 2) the metaboreflex threshold level of hindlimb blood 18 307 flow for effects on HR-SBRS were not different between the hemodynamic 308 parameters and the arterial baroreflex, and the effects of the muscle 309 metaboreflex on HR-SBRS occurred proportionately with the reflex effects on 310 the hemodynamic parameters such as HR, CO and MAP; 3) the effects of 311 MMA on HR-SBRS occur progressively with graded metaboreflex activation and 312 do not saturate over a wide range of MMA; and 4) the effects of MMA on 313 baroreflex resetting were coincident with the effects on reduced HR-SBRS. 314 Feedback reflexes responsible for autonomic modulation during whole 315 body dynamic exercise. Overall, in addition to the feed-forward role of central 316 command, two negative feedback reflexes likely responsible for the autonomic 317 modulation during dynamic exercise are the arterial baroreflex and reflexes 318 arising from activation of skeletal muscle afferents (mechano-sensitive and 319 metabo-sensitive). A fall in skeletal muscle oxygen delivery and flow leads to 320 accumulation of metabolic by-products within the active muscle that stimulate 321 group III and IV afferent neurons, which evokes reflex changes in autonomic 322 nerve activity and release of vasoactive hormones; termed the muscle 323 metaboreflex. 324 cause peripheral vasoconstriction, which in turn raises mean arterial pressure. This reflex can trigger a significant increase in CO and/or also 19 325 The arterial baroreflex is the primary short-term regulator of arterial blood 326 pressure by altering peripheral vasoconstriction and cardiac output, via 327 adjustments of sympathetic and parasympathetic nerve activity (38). 328 addition, it is well known that the baroreflex control of heart rate and blood 329 pressure is reset during exercise. One known mechanism responsible for this 330 baroreflex resetting during exercise is the feedback from skeletal muscle 331 afferents. 332 feedback from the skeletal muscles modulate the arterial baroreflex function (19; 333 28; 46). 334 (HR-SBRS) technique to study the interaction between these two reflexes, our 335 group has recently observed that during mild and moderate dynamic exercise, 336 muscle metaboreflex activation causes not only resetting of the arterial 337 baroreflex but also a decrease in HR-SBRS (40). In that study, MMA was 338 obtained via a one step reduction in HLBF (~50% and ~70% of exercising blood 339 flow level for mild and moderate workload respectively). However, it remained 340 unknown whether the muscle metaboreflex affects the arterial baroreflex in 341 similar fashion as the cardiovascular effects of the metaboreflex on 342 hemodynamic parameters. Previous studies from our and other laboratories In In animal and human studies, it has been shown that neural Employing the spontaneous heart rate baroreflex sensitivity 20 343 have shown that the stimulus-response relationship between O2 delivery or 344 blood flow to active skeletal muscle is quite linear once beyond threshold and no 345 saturation occurs at sub-maximal workloads over a wide range of metaboreflex 346 activation (14; 43; 49). The question remained whether the effects of MMA on 347 HR-SBRS would show a similar trend and we found that this was the case. 348 Progressive MMA caused progressive increases in HR and MAP and 349 progressively reset the HR-LVSP relationship upwards and to the right with a 350 decrease in baroreflex HR sensitivity as indexed by the spontaneous method. 351 The effects of MMA on HR-SBRS were quite linear when analyzed both as the 352 relationship between the imposed reductions in HLBF and HR-SBRS and the 353 metaboreflex-induced increases in LVSP vs. HR-SBRS. 354 muscle metaboreflex became apparent at the same threshold level of HLBF as 355 all other hemodynamic parameters and no saturation of the effects of MMA on 356 HR-SBRS was evident over the range of MMA employed (which reflected the 357 largest activation of the muscle metaboreflex we could obtain in which 358 steady-state could be achieved with the animal freely exercising on the treadmill). 359 Thus, the present study shows that the muscle metaboreflex control of cardiac 360 function at either mild or moderate exercise is induced and progresses linearly in The effects of the 21 361 concert with baroreflex modulation as HLBF at the threshold for HR-SRBRS, CO, 362 MAP, LVSP and HR were not different and all responded linearly with further 363 reductions in HLBF. 364 Muscle metaboreflex and baroreflex interaction. It is highly likely that 365 muscle metaboreflex and baroreflex interaction occurs centrally. Previous 366 studies have shown that central modulation of the baroreflex circuitry may be 367 responsible for mediating resetting of the baroreflex during exercise (7; 8; 11; 17; 368 19; 30). Among the different possible central sites that are part of the central 369 baroreflex arc, the nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS) is a region where an interaction 370 between these two reflexes can take place, for this nucleus apart for being 371 known for participating in many viscerosensory systems receives inputs from 372 both the baroreceptor afferents and spinal somato-sensory input, and contains a 373 complex network of excitatory and inhibitory interneurons (2). Indeed, neural 374 feedback from skeletal muscle afferents have been shown to activate a 375 GABAergic mechanism within the NTS which reduces the rapid bradycardic 376 responses to transient excitability of baroreceptor activation (18; 31). 377 different or additional possible central site for this reflexes interaction is the 378 rostral ventrolateral medulla, for it has been shown that skeletal muscle afferents A 22 379 can cause direct excitation of sympathetic premotor neurons in this brain stem 380 region (22; 29; 47). 381 baroreflex interaction is that muscle metaboreflex-induced increase in plasma 382 norepinephrine attenuates baroreflex modulation of HR (21) as it has been 383 previously shown that MMA elicits a rise in plasma norepinephrine and that high 384 plasma norepinephrine concentration attenuates parasympathetic control of HR 385 (9; 23). However, it is still uncertain if more central regions are involved as well 386 as the cellular mechanisms responsible for the interaction. Another possibility for the muscle metaboreflex and 387 Limitations of the study. Our approach to evaluate the arterial baroreflex 388 control of HR based on spontaneous fluctuations in blood pressure and HR has 389 advantages and disadvantages, which have been previously described in detail 390 (39; 40). Briefly, the spontaneous baroreflex technique enables a qualitative and 391 quantitative estimate of the baroreceptor-cardiac response relationships during 392 spontaneous blood pressure fluctuations without the necessity of any 393 mechanical or pharmacological intervention. Sympatho-stimulatory reflexes by 394 stretch of cardiac chambers after phenylephrine-induced increase of afterload or 395 a direct β-adrenergic stimulation at the sinus node level by high doses of the 396 drug may affect baroreflex sensitivity determination. Alternatively, the autonomic 23 397 mechanisms mediating these rapid baroreflex-induced changes in HR are likely 398 only parasympathetic in nature (24; 26) and in addition this approach only 399 examines the baroreflex sensitivity over a relatively modest range of pressure, 400 which therefore does not allow the calculation of the entire sigmoidal baroreflex 401 stimulus-response relationship. It is possible if not likely that at least a portion 402 of the reduction in HR-SBRS with exercise and metaboreflex activation stemmed 403 from a shift in the operating point of the baroreflex from the high slope section 404 near the middle of the stimulus-response relationship towards a flatter part of the 405 sigmoid curve (33). Previous studies have shown that HR-SBRS is virtually 406 abolished after arterial baroreceptor denervation, which shows the reflex nature 407 of the HR responses (3; 16). 408 Conclusions: In conclusion, MMA during mild and moderate dynamic 409 exercise progressively resets the arterial baroreflex to higher blood pressure and 410 HR in direct proportion to the extent of MMA. As the muscle metaboreflex is 411 engaged, it simultaneously resets and progressively depresses HR-SBRS in 412 concert with the increases in heart rate, cardiac output and arterial blood 413 pressure. Thus, the central interactions occur concurrently with the efferent 414 responses. The fall in SBRS with metaboreflex activation indicates that the 24 415 ability of the baroreflex to rapidly respond to perturbations in arterial pressure via 416 changes in HR progressively decreases as muscle ischemia ensues. This may 417 be particularly important in during exercise in patients with claudication and in 418 other patients with high sympathetic activity such as those with heart failure and 419 hypertension. 420 421 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 422 The authors thank Jody Helme-Day, and Erin Krengel, for expert 423 technical assistance and care of the animals. This research was supported by 424 National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Grant HL-55473. 425 25 426 Table 1: All animal’s average slope of the linear regression lines between HLBF 427 and HR-SBRS during mild and moderate exercise. The high correlation 428 coefficient denotes the close linear relationship between the two variables. 429 Figure 1: Example of the nonlinear pattern of one’s animal hemodynamic (mean 430 arterial pressure) response to graded reductions in hindlimb blood flow. 431 Figure 2: Panels A and C: Prevailing Heart rate (HR) and left ventricular systolic 432 pressure (LVSP) with corresponding mean slopes at rest (dark squares dotted 433 lines), during free flow exercise (dark triangles dashed lines) and during exercise 434 + hindlimb blood flow (HLBF) step reductions (empty circles solid lines) in one 435 animal. Panels B and D show in the same animal the heart rate spontaneous 436 baroreflex sensitivity level (HR-SBRS) during free flow exercise (dark triangles 437 dashed lines) and during exercise + HLBF step reductions (empty circles solid 438 lines). 439 Figure 3: Average heart rate (HR), stroke volume (SV), cardiac output (CO), 440 mean arterial pressure (MAP), left ventricular systolic pressure (LVSP) and heart 441 rate spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity (HR-SBRS) at rest (triangles), during 442 mild (solid circles) and moderate (empty circles) exercise without any imposed 443 reductions in HLBF (free flow), at threshold and ~ maximum activation of the 26 444 muscle metaboreflex (maximal possible hindlimb blood flow reduction). An * 445 indicate a significant increase from rest to mild or moderate exercise (P < 0.05), 446 while † indicates a significant increase from mild or moderate exercise threshold 447 to ~ maximum activation of the muscle metaboreflex (P < 0.05) 448 Figure 4: Hindlimb blood flows at metaboreflex threshold for heart rate 449 spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity (HR-SBRS), heart rate (HR), cardiac output 450 (CO), left ventricular systolic pressure (LVSP) and mean arterial pressure (MAP). 451 Grey bars: mild exercise, black bars: moderate exercise. Note that no statistical 452 difference was found. 453 Figure 5: Relationship between heart rate spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity 454 (HR-SBRS) and left ventricular systolic pressure (LVSP) beyond metaboreflex 455 threshold for each experiment at mild (left panel) and moderate (right panel) 456 workloads. The thick black solid line represents the average of the slopes and 457 intercepts of the individual lines. 458 27 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 Table 1. Average slope of the linear regressions lines between HLBF and HR-SBRS during mild and moderate exercise. Mild exercise Moderate exercise HR-SBRS/HLBF (bpm/mmHg/l/min) -4.15 ± 1.09 -1.12 ± 0.29 * Correlation coefficient -0.98 ± 0.01 -0.96 ± 0.01 Values are means ± SE. HR-SBRS - spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity, HLBF - Hindlimb blood flow. * P<0.05 Mild vs. Moderate exercise. 28 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 Figure 1 29 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 Figure 2 30 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 Figure 3 31 552 553 554 555 Figure 4 32 556 557 558 559 560 561 Figure 5 33 562 563 564 References 565 1. Augustyniak RA, Collins HL, Ansorge EJ, Rossi NF and O'Leary DS. 566 Severe exercise alters the strength and mechanisms of the muscle 567 metaboreflex. American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory 568 Physiology 280: H1645-H1652, 2001. 569 2. Barraco RA. Nucleus of the solitary tract. Boca Raton: CRC Press, 1993. 570 3. Bertinieri G, Di Rienzo M, Cavallazzi A, Ferrari AU, Pedotti A and 571 Mancia G. 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