11,266 results on '"Sympathetic Nervous System physiology"'
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2. Sympathetic nerve signals: orchestrators of mammary development and stem cell vitality.
- Author
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Ye Z, Xu Y, Zhang M, and Cai C
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Mice, Signal Transduction, Cell Survival, Pregnancy, Cell Differentiation, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System cytology, Mammary Glands, Animal cytology, Mammary Glands, Animal growth & development, Mammary Glands, Animal physiology, Stem Cells cytology, Stem Cells metabolism
- Abstract
The mammary gland is a dynamic organ that undergoes significant changes at multiple stages of postnatal development. Although the roles of systemic hormones and microenvironmental cues in mammary homeostasis have been extensively studied, the influence of neural signals, particularly those from the sympathetic nervous system, remains poorly understood. Here, using a mouse mammary gland model, we delved into the regulatory role of sympathetic nervous signaling in the context of mammary stem cells and mammary development. Our findings revealed that depletion of sympathetic nerve signals results in defective mammary development during puberty, adulthood, and pregnancy, accompanied by a reduction in mammary stem cell numbers. Through in vitro three-dimensional culture and in vivo transplantation analyses, we demonstrated that the absence of sympathetic nerve signals hinders mammary stem cell self-renewal and regeneration, while activation of sympathetic nervous signaling promotes these capacities. Mechanistically, sympathetic nerve signals orchestrate mammary stem cell activity and mammary development through the extracellular signal-regulated kinase signaling pathway. Collectively, our study unveils the crucial roles of sympathetic nerve signals in sustaining mammary development and regulating mammary stem cell activity, offering a novel perspective on the involvement of the nervous system in modulating adult stem cell function and organ development., (© The Author(s) (2024). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Journal of Molecular Cell Biology, CEMCS, CAS.)
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- 2024
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3. RGS Proteins in Sympathetic Nervous System Regulation: Focus on Adrenal RGS4.
- Author
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Lymperopoulos A and Stoicovy RA
- Subjects
- Humans, Animals, Adrenal Glands metabolism, Signal Transduction, Chromaffin Cells metabolism, Chromaffin Cells physiology, Adrenal Medulla metabolism, Adrenal Medulla physiology, Norepinephrine metabolism, RGS Proteins metabolism, RGS Proteins physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System metabolism, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology
- Abstract
The sympathetic nervous system (SNS) consists largely of two different types of components: neurons that release the neurotransmitter norepinephrine (NE, noradrenaline) to modulate homeostasis of the innevrvated effector organ or tissue and adrenal chromaffin cells, which synthesize and secrete the hormone epinephrine (Epi, adrenaline) and some NE into the blood circulation to act at distant organs and tissues that are not directly innervated by the SNS. Like almost every physiological process in the human body, G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) tightly modulate both NE release from sympathetic neuronal terminals and catecholamine (CA) secretion from the adrenal medulla. Regulator of G protein Signaling (RGS) proteins, acting as guanosine triphosphatase (GTPase)-activating proteins (GAPs) for the Gα subunits of heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide-binding proteins (G proteins), play a central role in silencing G protein signaling from a plethora of GPCRs. Certain RGS proteins and, in particular, RGS4, have been implicated in regulation of SNS activity and of adrenal chromaffin cell CA secretion. More specifically, recent studies have implicated RGS4 in regulation of NE release from cardiac sympathetic neurons by means of terminating free fatty acid receptor (FFAR)-3 calcium signaling and in regulation of NE and Epi secretion from the adrenal medulla by means of terminating cholinergic calcium signaling in adrenal chromaffin cells. Thus, in this review, we provide an overview of the current literature on the involvement of RGS proteins, with a particular focus on RGS4, in these two processes, i.e., NE release from sympathetic nerve terminals & CA secretion from adrenal chromaffin cells. We also highlight the therapeutic potential of RGS4 pharmacological manipulation for diseases characterized by sympathetic dysfunction or SNS hyperactivity, such as heart failure and hypertension., (© 2024 The Author(s). Published by IMR Press.)
- Published
- 2024
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4. A new sympathetic understanding of exercise blood flow regulation in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction.
- Author
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Manferdelli G and Wakeham DJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Heart Failure physiopathology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiopathology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Exercise physiology, Stroke Volume physiology
- Published
- 2024
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5. Esaxerenone, organ protection without sympathetic activation.
- Author
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Kawakami-Mori F
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System drug effects
- Published
- 2024
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6. Acute isometric and dynamic exercise do not alter cerebral sympathetic nerve activity in healthy humans.
- Author
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Tymko MM, Drapeau A, Vieira-Coelho MA, Labrecque L, Imhoff S, Coombs GB, Langevin S, Fortin M, Châteauvert N, Ainslie PN, and Brassard P
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Hand Strength physiology, Norepinephrine blood, Blood Pressure physiology, Isometric Contraction physiology, Heart Rate physiology, Young Adult, Healthy Volunteers, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Exercise physiology, Cerebrovascular Circulation physiology
- Abstract
The impact of physiological stressors on cerebral sympathetic nervous activity (SNA) remains controversial. We hypothesized that cerebral noradrenaline (NA) spillover, an index of cerebral SNA, would not change during both submaximal isometric handgrip (HG) exercise followed by a post-exercise circulatory occlusion (PECO), and supine dynamic cycling exercise. Twelve healthy participants (5 females) underwent simultaneous blood sampling from the right radial artery and right internal jugular vein. Right internal jugular vein blood flow was measured using Duplex ultrasound, and tritiated NA was infused through the participants' right superficial forearm vein. Heart rate was recorded via electrocardiogram and blood pressure was monitored using the right radial artery. Total NA spillover increased during HG (P = 0.049), PECO (P = 0.006), and moderate cycling exercise (P = 0.03) compared to rest. Cerebral NA spillover remained unchanged during isometric HG exercise (P = 0.36), PECO after the isometric HG exercise (P = 0.45), and during moderate cycling exercise (P = 0.94) compared to rest. These results indicate that transient increases in blood pressure during acute exercise involving both small and large muscle mass do not engage cerebral SNA in healthy humans. Our findings suggest that cerebral SNA may be non-obligatory for exercise-related cerebrovascular adjustments., Competing Interests: Declaration of conflicting interestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2024
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7. My sojourn with cerebral sympathetic nervous activity.
- Author
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Brassard P
- Subjects
- Humans, Animals, Brain physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology
- Published
- 2024
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8. Inhibition of muscle sympathetic nerve activity in premenopausal women: responses to sudden sensory stimuli predict responses to mental stress.
- Author
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Lundblad LC, Eskelin JJ, Karlsson T, and Elam M
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Electric Stimulation methods, Neural Inhibition physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiopathology, Premenopause physiology, Stress, Psychological physiopathology, Blood Pressure physiology, Peroneal Nerve physiology, Muscle, Skeletal physiology
- Abstract
Muscle sympathetic nerve responses to sudden sensory stimuli have been elucidated in several studies on young healthy men, showing reproducible interindividual differences ranging from varying degrees of inhibition to no significant change, with very few subjects showing significant excitation. These individual response patterns have been shown to predict the neural response to mental stress and coupled blood pressure responses. The aim of this study was to investigate whether premenopausal healthy women show similar neural and blood pressure responses. Muscle sympathetic nerve recordings from the peroneal nerve were performed in 34 healthy women (mean age 27 ± 8 yr) during sudden sensory stimuli (electrical stimuli to a finger) and 3 min of mental stress (forced arithmetics). After sensory stimuli, 18 women showed varying degrees of inhibition of muscle sympathetic nerve activity (burst amplitude mean reduction 60%, range 34-100%). The remaining 16 showed no inhibition (mean 5%, range -31 to 28%; one subject exhibiting excitation). During 3 min of mental stress, the normalized change in burst incidence for muscle sympathetic nerve activity correlated with the percentage change of muscle sympathetic nerve activity induced by the sensory stimulation protocol (r = 0.64, P = 0.0042). In contrast to men, the neural responses did not predict changes in blood pressure. Thus, premenopausal females show a similar range of individual differences in defense-related muscle sympathetic neural responses as men, but no associated differences in blood pressure responses. Whether these patterns are unchanged after menopause remains to be investigated. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Muscle sympathetic neural responses to sudden sensory stimuli in premenopausal women showed interindividual differences and the distribution of sympathetic responses was similar to that previously found in men. Despite this similarity, the associated differences in transient blood pressure responses seen in men were not found in women. The increased risk of developing hypertension in postmenopausal women warrants an investigation of whether these response patterns are altered after menopause.
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- 2024
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9. Interaction of simultaneous hypoxia and baroreflex loading on control of sympathetic action potential subpopulations.
- Author
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Boyes NG, Klassen SA, Baker SE, Nicholson WT, Joyner MJ, Shoemaker JK, and Limberg JK
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- Male, Humans, Adult, Young Adult, Pressoreceptors physiology, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Blood Pressure physiology, Baroreflex physiology, Baroreflex drug effects, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Hypoxia physiopathology, Phenylephrine pharmacology, Action Potentials physiology
- Abstract
Efferent muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) is under tonic baroreflex control. The arterial baroreflex exerts the strongest influence over medium-sized sympathetic action potential (AP) subpopulations in efferent MSNA recordings. Prior work from multiunit MSNA recordings has shown baroreflex loading selectively abolishes the sympathetic response to hypoxia. The purpose of the study was to examine baroreflex control over different-sized AP clusters and characterize the neural recruitment strategies of sympathetic AP subpopulations with baroreflex and combined baroreflex/chemoreflex (i.e., hypoxia) activation. We loaded the arterial baroreceptors [intravenous phenylephrine (PE)] alone and in combination with systemic hypoxia ([Formula: see text] 80%) in nine healthy young men. We extracted sympathetic APs using the wavelet-based methodology and quantified baroreflex gain for individual AP clusters. AP baroreflex threshold gain was measured as the slope of the linear relationship between AP probability versus diastolic blood pressure for 10 normalized clusters. Baroreflex loading with phenylephrine decreased MSNA and AP firing compared with baseline (all P < 0.05). However, the phenylephrine-mediated decrease in AP firing was lost with concurrent hypoxia ( P = 0.384). Compared with baseline, baroreflex loading reduced medium-sized AP cluster baroreflex threshold slope (condition P = 0.005) and discharge probability (condition P < 0.0001); these reductions from baseline were maintained during simultaneous hypoxia (both P < 0.05). Present findings indicate a key modulatory role of the baroreceptors on medium-sized APs in blood pressure regulation that withstands competing signals from peripheral chemoreflex activation. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study provides a novel understanding on baroreflex control of efferent sympathetic nervous system activity during competing stressors: baroreflex loading and peripheral chemoreflex activation. We show chemoreflex activation buffers baroreflex-mediated reductions in sympathetic nervous system activity. More importantly, baroreflex loading reduced baroreflex threshold gain of sympathetic action potential clusters and this reduction withstood chemoreflex activation. These data suggest the arterial baroreflex holds a primary regulatory role over medium-sized sympathetic neurons despite competing chemoreflex signals.
- Published
- 2024
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10. Neuregulin4-ErbB4 signalling pathway is driven by electroacupuncture stimulation to remodel brown adipose tissue innervation.
- Author
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Yu Z, Zhang T, Yang X, Xu B, Yu Z, An L, Xu T, Jing X, Wang Y, and Lu M
- Subjects
- Animals, Mice, Male, Neuregulins metabolism, Obesity therapy, Obesity metabolism, Obesity physiopathology, Adipose Tissue, Brown metabolism, Adipose Tissue, Brown innervation, Electroacupuncture methods, Signal Transduction physiology, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Receptor, ErbB-4 metabolism, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Thermogenesis physiology, Diet, High-Fat adverse effects
- Abstract
Aim: To show that electroacupuncture stimulation (ES) remodels sympathetic innervation in brown adipose tissue (BAT) via the bone morphogenic protein 8B (BMP8B)-neuregulin 4 (NRG4)-ErbB4 axis, with somatotopic dependence., Materials and Methods: We established a high-fat diet (HFD) model with C57BL/6J mice to measure the thermogenesis and metabolism of BAT. In addition, the sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) was measured with the electrophysiological technique, and the immunostaining of c-Fos was used to detect the central nervous system sources of sympathetic outflows. Finally, the key role of the BMP8B-NRG4-ErbB4 axis was verified by peripheral specific antagonism of ErbB4., Results: ES at the forelimb and abdomen regions significantly up-regulate SNA, whereas ES at the hindlimb region has a limited regulatory effect on SNA but still partially restores HFD-induced BAT dysfunction. Mechanistically, ES at the forelimb and abdomen regions driving catecholaminergic signals in brown adipocytes depends on neural activities projected from the ventromedial nucleus of the hypothalamus (VMH) to the spinal cord intermediolateral column (IML). Notably, the peripheral suppression of ErbB4 in BAT inhibits the thermogenesis and metabolic function of BAT, as well as significantly hindering the SNA activation and metabolic benefits induced by ES., Conclusion: These results suggest that ES appears to be an effective approach for remodeling sympathetic innervation in BAT, which is closely related to neuronal activity in the VMH and the NRG4-ErbB4 signaling pathway., (© 2024 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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11. Sympathetic response following unannounced loss of balance during walking in young adults: laboratory study.
- Author
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Meir G, Katz A, Berdichevsky Y, Reiner-Benaim A, and Melzer I
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Young Adult, Adult, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Walking physiology, Postural Balance physiology, Galvanic Skin Response physiology
- Abstract
An unannounced balance loss during walking, i.e., balance perturbation, is a stressful event, which changes the activity of the sympathetic nervous system (SNS). We examined SNS response to unannounced balance perturbation during walking, simulating real-life condition of balance loss. We asked: do laboratory-induced unannounced balance losses during walking cause a sympathetic response, and-if so-does it habituate after a series of perturbations? Thirty-four young adults underwent a series of six successive unannounced balance perturbations while walking on a treadmill. Sympathetic activity was monitored continuously using electrodermal activity and compared before and immediately after each unannounced perturbation. All perturbations elicited a significant increase of electrodermal activity ( P < 0.001), indicating a phasic increase in the sympathetic drive. The relative phasic increase of electrodermal activity caused by the first perturbation was significantly higher than the last perturbation ( P < 0.05). Three different types of electrodermal activity behavior were observed: steady-level tonic SNS activity, increased SNS activity, and decreased SNS activity. Balance loss during walking triggers phasic SNS response, this response habituates after a series of unannounced balance perturbations. In addition, three distinct patterns of tonic sympathetic activity may imply variations in the ability of the SNS response to habituate across individuals. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Up to date, the literature typically provides information about sympathetic nervous system activity and relatively static balance. We believe that exposing participants to a balance loss during walking, i.e., unexpected perturbation, provides a more ecologically valid situation to measure sympathetic nervous system response; this provides new and vital knowledge that can have a significant impact and understanding of how the SNS responds to a loss of balance in a real-life situation.
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- 2024
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12. Sex differences, physical activity, and sympathetic regulation.
- Author
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Qin L
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Sex Characteristics, Motor Activity physiology, Sex Factors, Exercise physiology, Animals, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology
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- 2024
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13. Chemerin in caudal division of nucleus tractus solitarius increases sympathetic activity and blood pressure.
- Author
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Hao WY, Wang JX, Xu XY, Chen JL, Chen Q, Li YH, Zhu GQ, and Chen AD
- Subjects
- Animals, Male, Rats, Receptors, Chemokine metabolism, Heart Rate drug effects, Heart Rate physiology, Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins pharmacology, Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins administration & dosage, NADPH Oxidases metabolism, Superoxides metabolism, Solitary Nucleus drug effects, Solitary Nucleus physiology, Solitary Nucleus metabolism, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Chemokines metabolism, Blood Pressure drug effects, Blood Pressure physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System drug effects
- Abstract
Chemerin is an adipokine that contributes to metabolism regulation. Nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS) is the first relay station in the brain for accepting various visceral afferent activities for regulating cardiovascular activity. However, the roles of chemerin in the NTS in regulating sympathetic activity and blood pressure are almost unknown. This study aimed to determine the role and potential mechanism of chemerin in the NTS in modulating sympathetic outflow and blood pressure. Bilateral NTS microinjections were performed in anaesthetized adult male Sprague-Dawley rats. Renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA), mean arterial pressure (MAP) and heart rate (HR) were continuously recorded. Chemerin and its receptor chemokine-like receptor 1 (CMKLR1) were highly expressed in caudal NTS (cNTS). Microinjection of chemerin-9 to the cNTS increased RSNA, MAP and HR, which were prevented by CMKLR1 antagonist α-NETA, superoxide scavenger tempol or N-acetyl cysteine, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) oxidase inhibitors diphenyleneiodonium or apocynin. Chemerin-9 increased superoxide production and NADPH oxidase activity in the cNTS. The increased superoxide production induced by chemerin-9 was inhibited by α-NETA. The effects of cNTS microinjection of chemerin-9 on the RSNA, MAP and HR were attenuated by the pretreatment with paraventricular nucleus (PVN) microinjection of NMDA receptor antagonist MK-801 rather than AMPA/kainate receptor antagonist CNQX. These results indicate that chemerin-9 in the NTS increases sympathetic outflow, blood pressure and HR via CMKLR1-mediated NADPH oxidase activation and subsequent superoxide production in anaesthetized normotensive rats. Glutamatergic inputs in the PVN are needed for the chemerin-9-induced responses., (© 2024 Federation of European Neuroscience Societies and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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14. Relationship between regional sympathetic vascular transduction and sympathetic transduction of blood pressure in young adults at rest.
- Author
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McCarthy DG, Nardone M, Pfundt K, and Millar PJ
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- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Young Adult, Rest physiology, Muscle, Skeletal innervation, Muscle, Skeletal blood supply, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Femoral Artery physiology, Regional Blood Flow physiology, Vasoconstriction, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Blood Pressure physiology, Heart Rate physiology
- Abstract
A burst of muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) induces vasoconstriction that transiently reduces regional vascular conductance and increases systemic blood pressure (BP) over the subsequent 4-8 cardiac cycles. These responses are termed sympathetic neurovascular transduction and sympathetic transduction of BP, respectively. Sympathetic transduction of BP is commonly calculated and interpreted as a proxy measure for regional sympathetic neurovascular transduction despite the systemic nature of BP regulation. The present analysis tested whether the peak change in signal-averaged sympathetic transduction of BP was correlated to the change in regional sympathetic vascular transduction at rest. Fourteen adults (5 females, 23 ± 3 yr) arrived at the laboratory, ate a standardized meal, and rested for 90-120 min. MSNA (fibular nerve microneurography), heart rate (electrocardiography), beat-to-beat BP (finger photoplethysmography), and superficial femoral artery blood flow (Doppler ultrasound) were obtained continuously for 10 min in the supine position. Femoral vascular conductance (FVC) was calculated as blood flow divided by mean arterial BP. The peak change in diastolic BP following a burst of MSNA was correlated to the corresponding nadir change in femoral vascular conductance ( r = -0.58 [-0.07 to -0.85], P = 0.03) and superficial femoral artery blood flow ( r = -0.54 [-0.17 to -0.83], P = 0.04). The nadir change in diastolic BP in cardiac cycles not following an MSNA burst was correlated to the peak change in femoral vascular conductance ( r = -0.42 [-0.83 to 0.00], P = 0.05), but not superficial femoral artery blood flow ( r = 0.41 [-0.77 to 0.15], P = 0.14). In conclusion, more commonly assessed sympathetic transduction of BP provides moderate insight into regional sympathetic neurovascular transduction. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The majority of studies have used signal-averaged sympathetic transduction of blood pressure as a generalized measure of transduction. In this analysis, we show that sympathetic transduction of blood pressure and regional sympathetic vascular transduction were moderately correlated in healthy adults at rest. The moderate strength of this relationship highlights potential differences between regional and systemic assessments of sympathetic transduction and suggests that future work should choose the transduction measure best aligned with the research question.
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- 2024
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15. Nadir blood pressure responses to longer consecutive cardiac cycle sequences absent of sympathetic bursts are associated with popliteal endothelial-dependent dilation.
- Author
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O'Brien MW, Schwartz BD, Petterson JL, Courish MK, Shivgulam ME, and Kimmerly DS
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Endothelium, Vascular physiology, Peroneal Nerve physiology, Heart Rate physiology, Popliteal Artery physiology, Blood Pressure physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Vasodilation physiology, Vasodilation drug effects
- Abstract
Purpose: The nadir pressure responses to cardiac cycles absent of muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) bursts (or non-bursts) are typically reported in studies quantifying sympathetic transduction, but the information gained by studying non-bursts is unclear. We tested the hypothesis that longer sequences of non-bursts (≥8 cardiac cycles) would be associated with a greater nadir diastolic blood pressure (DBP) and that better popliteal artery function would be associated with an augmented reduction in DBP., Methods: Resting beat-by-beat DBP (via finger photoplethysmography) and common peroneal nerve MSNA (via microneurography) were recorded in 39 healthy, adults (age 23.4 ± 5.3 years; 19 females). For each cardiac cycle absent of MSNA bursts, the mean nadir DBP (ΔDBP) during the 12 cardiac cycles following were determined, and separate analyses were conducted for ≥8 or < 8 cardiac cycle sequences. Popliteal artery endothelial-dependent (via flow-mediated dilation; FMD) and endothelial-independent vasodilation (via nitroglycerin-mediated dilation; NMD) were determined., Results: The nadir DBP responses to sequences ≥8 cardiac cycles were larger (-1.40 ± 1.27 mmHg) than sequences <8 (-0.38 ± 0.46 mmHg; p < 0.001). In adjusting for sex and burst frequency (14 ± 8 bursts/min), larger absolute or relative FMD (p < 0.01), but not NMD (p > 0.53) was associated with an augmented nadir DBP. This overall DBP-FMD relationship was similar in sequences ≥8 (p = 0.04-0.05), but not <8 (p > 0.72)., Conclusion: The DBP responses to non-bursts, particularly longer sequences, were inversely associated with popliteal endothelial function, but not vascular smooth muscle sensitivity. This study provides insight into the information gained by quantifying the DBP responses to cardiac cycles absent of MSNA., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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16. Respiratory modulation of sympathetic transduction to blood pressure in health and type 2 diabetes.
- Author
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Plunkett MJ, Holwerda S, Young BE, Fadel PJ, and Fisher JP
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- Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Female, Adult, Respiration, Hypertension physiopathology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 physiopathology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiopathology, Blood Pressure physiology
- Abstract
Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is often accompanied by hypertension, exaggerated blood pressure (BP) responses to sympatho-excitatory stressors, and raised cardiovascular disease risk. Appropriate respiratory-sympathetic coupling and sympathetic transduction to BP are important for short- and longer-term BP control. We tested the hypotheses that respiratory modulation of muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) and its transduction to BP would be impaired in T2D and associated with higher BP and respiratory-coupled BP variability. Resting MSNA, respiration and beat-to-beat BP were recorded in 20 T2D (49.1 ± 7.4 years; mean ± SD) and 13 healthy control (46.3 ± 9.4 years) participants. MSNA and the transduction of sympathetic bursts (signal-averaging) to mean arterial pressure (MAP) were compared at low and high lung volume phases. The peak MAP response following a sympathetic burst was lower during the high lung volume than low lung volume phase in controls (P = 0.005), whereas it was unchanged with phase in T2D participants (P = 0.522). Respiratory modulation of MSNA was impaired in T2D participants, who had an attenuated reduction in burst incidence from low to the high lung volume phase, versus controls (27.8 ± 38.4% vs. 49.4 ± 24.6%, respectively; P = 0.043). The T2D participants were grouped into unimpaired respiratory modulators (burst incidence modulation median or above) or impaired respiratory modulators (below median). Impaired modulators had higher systolic BP (133 ± 14 vs. 121 ± 11 mmHg, P = 0.046), greater Traube-Hering wave amplitudes (6.3 ± 2.4 vs. 4.6 ± 1.1 mmHg; P = 0.028) and higher BP variability (MAP average real variability, 2.0 ± 0.7 vs. 1.4 ± 0.3, P = 0.033). Respiratory modulation of MSNA and sympathetic transduction to BP are altered in T2D patients and may contribute to their increased hypertension and cardiovascular risk. KEY POINTS: Respiratory-sympathetic coupling and sympathetic transduction to blood pressure (BP) contribute to short- and longer-term BP control. Our understanding of these processes in health and type 2 diabetes (T2D), a condition with high prevalence of hypertension and cardiovascular risk, is incomplete. We found that respiration and sympathetic transduction to BP are coupled in healthy individuals. The mean arterial pressure response to a sympathetic burst was reduced during the high lung volume compared to the low lung volume phase. This coupling was absent in T2D. Respiratory modulation of muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) is impaired in T2D, with a blunted reduction of MSNA observed during the high lung volume phase. T2D patients with impaired respiratory MSNA modulation had augmented systolic BP, respiratory-related BP excursions (Traube-Hering waves) and BP variability. Abnormal respiratory modulation of MSNA and sympathetic transduction to BP in T2D may contribute to altered blood pressure control and cardiovascular risk in this population., (© 2024 The Author(s). The Journal of Physiology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The Physiological Society.)
- Published
- 2024
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17. The impact of exercise training on muscle sympathetic nerve activity: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
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Meyer SE, Kimber M, Maier LE, Matenchuk B, Moldenhauer R, de Waal S, Sivak A, Davenport MH, and Steinback C'
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- Humans, Heart Rate physiology, Oxygen Consumption physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Muscle, Skeletal innervation, Exercise physiology, Blood Pressure physiology
- Abstract
The purpose of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to examine the effects of exercise training on muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) in humans. Studies included exercise interventions [randomized controlled trials (RCTs), nonrandomized controlled trials (non-RCTs), or pre-to-post intervention] that reported on adults (≥18 yr) where MSNA was directly assessed using microneurography, and relevant outcomes were assessed [MSNA (total activity, burst frequency, burst incidence, amplitude), heart rate, blood pressure (systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, or mean blood pressure), and aerobic capacity (maximal or peak oxygen consumption)]. Forty intervention studies ( n = 1,253 individuals) were included. RCTs of exercise compared with no exercise illustrated that those randomized to the exercise intervention had a significant reduction in MSNA burst frequency and incidence compared with controls. This reduction in burst frequency was not different between individuals with cardiovascular disease compared with those without. However, the reduction in burst incidence was greater in those with cardiovascular disease [9 RCTs studies, n = 234, mean difference (MD) -21.08 bursts/100 hbs; 95% confidence interval (CI) -16.51, -25.66; I
2 = 63%] compared with those without (6 RCTs, n = 192, MD -10.92 bursts/100 hbs; 95% CI -4.12, -17.73; I2 = 76%). Meta-regression analyses demonstrated a dose-response relationship where individuals with higher burst frequency and incidence preintervention had a greater reduction in values post-intervention. These findings suggest that exercise training reduces muscle sympathetic nerve activity, which may be valuable for improving cardiovascular health. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This systematic review and meta-analysis suggests exercise training reduces muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA), which may be valuable for improving cardiovascular health. The reduction in burst incidence was greater among individuals with cardiovascular disease when compared with those without; exercise training may be particularly beneficial for individuals with cardiovascular disease. Meta-regression analyses demonstrated a dose-response relationship, where individuals with higher sympathetic activity preintervention had greater reductions in sympathetic activity post-intervention.- Published
- 2024
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18. Central α 2 -adrenergic mechanisms regulate human sympathetic neuronal discharge strategies.
- Author
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Klassen SA, Limberg JK, Harvey RE, Wiggins CC, Iannarelli NJ, Senefeld JW, Nicholson WT, Curry TB, Joyner MJ, Shoemaker JK, and Baker SE
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- Humans, Female, Adult, Male, Young Adult, Heart Rate drug effects, Heart Rate physiology, Blood Pressure physiology, Blood Pressure drug effects, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Muscle, Skeletal innervation, Muscle, Skeletal drug effects, Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-2 physiology, Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-2 metabolism, Dexmedetomidine pharmacology, Adrenergic alpha-2 Receptor Agonists pharmacology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System drug effects, Action Potentials drug effects, Action Potentials physiology
- Abstract
The present study investigated the impact of central α
2 -adrenergic mechanisms on sympathetic action potential (AP) discharge, recruitment and latency strategies. We used the microneurographic technique to record muscle sympathetic nerve activity and a continuous wavelet transform to investigate postganglionic sympathetic AP firing during a baseline condition and an infusion of a α2 -adrenergic receptor agonist, dexmedetomidine (10 min loading infusion of 0.225 µg kg-1 ; maintenance infusion of 0.1-0.5 µg kg h-1 ) in eight healthy individuals (28 ± 7 years, five females). Dexmedetomidine reduced mean pressure (92 ± 7 to 80 ± 8 mmHg, P < 0.001) but did not alter heart rate (61 ± 13 to 60 ± 14 bpm; P = 0.748). Dexmedetomidine reduced sympathetic AP discharge (126 ± 73 to 27 ± 24 AP 100 beats-1 , P = 0.003) most strongly for medium-sized APs (normalized cluster 2: 21 ± 10 to 5 ± 5 AP 100 beats-1 ; P < 0.001). Dexmedetomidine progressively de-recruited sympathetic APs beginning with the largest AP clusters (12 ± 3 to 7 ± 2 clusters, P = 0.002). Despite de-recruiting large AP clusters with shorter latencies, dexmedetomidine reduced AP latency across remaining clusters (1.18 ± 0.12 to 1.13 ± 0.13 s, P = 0.002). A subset of six participants performed a Valsalva manoeuvre (20 s, 40 mmHg) during baseline and the dexmedetomidine infusion. Compared to baseline, AP discharge (Δ 361 ± 292 to Δ 113 ± 155 AP 100 beats-1 , P = 0.011) and AP cluster recruitment elicited by the Valsalva manoeuvre were lower during dexmedetomidine (Δ 2 ± 1 to Δ 0 ± 2 AP clusters, P = 0.041). The reduction in sympathetic AP latency elicited by the Valsalva manoeuvre was not affected by dexmedetomidine (Δ -0.09 ± 0.07 to Δ -0.07 ± 0.14 s, P = 0.606). Dexmedetomidine reduced baroreflex gain, most strongly for medium-sized APs (normalized cluster 2: -6.0 ± 5 to -1.6 ± 2 % mmHg-1 ; P = 0.008). These data suggest that α2 -adrenergic mechanisms within the central nervous system modulate sympathetic postganglionic neuronal discharge, recruitment and latency strategies in humans. KEY POINTS: Sympathetic postganglionic neuronal subpopulations innervating the human circulation exhibit complex patterns of discharge, recruitment and latency. However, the central neural mechanisms governing sympathetic postganglionic discharge remain unclear. This microneurographic study investigated the impact of a dexmedetomidine infusion (α2 -adrenergic receptor agonist) on muscle sympathetic postganglionic action potential (AP) discharge, recruitment and latency patterns. Dexmedetomidine infusion inhibited the recruitment of large and fast conducting sympathetic APs and attenuated the discharge of medium sized sympathetic APs that fired during resting conditions and the Valsalva manoeuvre. Dexmedetomidine infusion elicited shorter sympathetic AP latencies during resting conditions but did not affect the reductions in latency that occurred during the Valsalva manoeuvre. These data suggest that α2 -adrenergic mechanisms within the central nervous system modulate sympathetic postganglionic neuronal discharge, recruitment and latency strategies in humans., (© 2024 The Author(s). The Journal of Physiology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The Physiological Society.)- Published
- 2024
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19. Actigraphy-based sleep and muscle sympathetic nerve activity in humans.
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Bigalke JA, Greenlund IM, Bigalke JR, and Carter JR
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Middle Aged, Sleep Quality, Adolescent, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Actigraphy, Heart Rate physiology, Blood Pressure physiology, Muscle, Skeletal innervation, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Sleep physiology
- Abstract
Short and insufficient sleep are prevalent and associated with cardiovascular disease, with the sympathetic nervous system as a suspected mediator. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the association between objective, actigraphy-based total sleep time (TST), sleep efficiency (SE), and cardiovascular and sympathetic regulation in healthy adults. We hypothesized that short TST and low SE would be associated with elevated resting blood pressure, heart rate (HR), and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA). Participants included 94 individuals [46 males, 48 females, age: 30 ± 15 yr, body mass index (BMI): 26 ± 4 kg/m
2 ]. All participants underwent at least 7 days of at-home, wristwatch actigraphy monitoring (avg: 10 ± 3 days). Seated blood pressures were assessed using brachial blood pressure measurements, followed by a 10-minute supine autonomic testing session consisting of continuous HR (electrocardiogram), beat-by-beat blood pressure (finger plethysmograph), and MSNA (microneurography) monitoring. Partial correlations were used to determine the relationship between sleep and cardiovascular parameters while accounting for the influence of age, sex, and BMI. TST was not associated with MAP ( R = -0.105, P = 0.321), HR ( R = 0.093, P = 0.383), or MSNA burst frequency (BF; R = -0.168, P = 0.112) and burst incidence (BI; R = -0.162, P = 0.124). Similarly, SE was not associated with MAP ( R = -0.088, P = 0.408), HR ( R = -0.118, P = 0.263), MSNA BF ( R = 0.038, P = 0.723), or MSNA BI ( R = 0.079, P = 0.459). In contrast to recent preliminary findings, our results do not support a significant association between actigraphy-based sleep duration or efficiency and measures of resting blood pressure, heart rate, and MSNA. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The present study investigated the independent association between actigraphy-based sleep duration, efficiency, and measures of blood pressure, heart rate, and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) in adult males and females. Contrary to our hypothesis, the findings do not support an independent association between habitual sleep and cardiovascular or sympathetic neural activity. However, these findings do not preclude a potential association between these parameters in populations with sleep disorders and/or cardiovascular disease.- Published
- 2024
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20. Sympathetic baroreflex sensitivity is enhanced in postmenopausal women.
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McGinty SJ, Matthews EL, Greaney JL, Shoemaker JK, and Wenner MM
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Adult, Young Adult, Heart Rate physiology, Premenopause physiology, Arterial Pressure physiology, Baroreflex physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Postmenopause physiology, Blood Pressure physiology
- Abstract
The sympathetic nervous system is critical for regulating blood pressure (BP) via the arterial baroreflex and sympathetic transduction in the peripheral vasculature. These mechanisms interact, and both may be altered with aging and impacted by menopause. Although age-related decreases in sympathetic transduction have been demonstrated in women, it remains unclear whether sympathetic baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) is impaired in postmenopausal women (POST). We tested the hypothesis that sympathetic BRS would be enhanced in POST compared with premenopausal women (PRE). We examined beat-by-beat BP and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) in 19 PRE (22 ± 2 yr, 22 ± 3 kg/m
2 ) and 12 POST (57 ± 5 yr, 24 ± 2 kg/m2 ) during 10 min of rest. Spontaneous sympathetic BRS was quantified as the slope of a linear regression between MSNA burst incidence and diastolic BP. Sympathetic transduction to mean arterial pressure (MAP) for the 10 cardiac cycles following spontaneous MSNA bursts was assessed via signal averaging method. Resting MAP was similar (PRE: 82 ± 8 vs. POST: 85 ± 8 mmHg, P = 0.43), whereas resting MSNA was elevated in POST (PRE: 10 ± 6 vs. POST: 45 ± 16 bursts/100 heart beats, P < 0.0001). Spontaneous sympathetic BRS was enhanced in POST (PRE: -2.0 ± 1.2 vs. POST: -5.2 ± 1.9 bursts/beat/mmHg, P < 0.0005). Sympathetic transduction to MAP was attenuated in POST (time: P < 0.001, group: P < 0.001, interaction: P < 0.01). These data suggest that sympathetic BRS may be enhanced in POST. Consistent with recent hypotheses, enhanced sensitivity of the arterial baroreflex's neural arc may signify a compensatory response to reduced efficiency of the peripheral arterial baroreflex arc (i.e., sympathetic transduction) to preserve BP buffering capacity. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Studies examining sympathetic baroreflex function with aging remain equivocal, with some studies showing an increase, decrease, or no change in sympathetic baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) in older adults compared with younger adults. With aging, women experience unique physiological changes due to menopause that influence autonomic function. For the first time, we show that postmenopausal women exhibit a greater sympathetic BRS compared with young premenopausal women.- Published
- 2024
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21. The interactive effects of posture and biological sex on the control of muscle sympathetic nerve activity during rhythmic handgrip exercise.
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D'Souza AW, Moore JP, Manabe K, Lawley JS, Washio T, Hissen SL, Sanchez B, and Fu Q
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Blood Pressure physiology, Baroreflex, Sex Factors, Muscle Contraction, Hand Strength physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Muscle, Skeletal innervation, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Exercise physiology, Posture physiology, Heart Rate
- Abstract
Body posture and biological sex exhibit independent effects on the sympathetic neural responses to dynamic exercise. However, the neural mechanisms (e.g., baroreflex) by which posture impacts sympathetic outflow during rhythmic muscular contractions, and whether biological sex affects posture-mediated changes in efferent sympathetic nerve traffic during exercise, remain unknown. Thus, we tested the hypotheses that increases in muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) would be greater during upright compared with supine rhythmic handgrip (RHG) exercise, and that females would demonstrate smaller increases in MSNA during upright RHG exercise than males. Twenty young (30 [6] yr; means [SD]) individuals (9 males, 11 females) underwent 6 min of supine and upright (head-up tilt 45°) RHG exercise at 40% maximal voluntary contraction with continuous measurements of MSNA (microneurography), blood pressure (photoplethysmography), and heart rate (electrocardiogram). In the pooled group, absolute MSNA burst frequency ( P < 0.001), amplitude ( P = 0.009), and total MSNA ( P < 0.001) were higher during upright compared with supine RHG exercise. However, body posture did not impact the peak change in MSNA during RHG exercise (range: P = 0.063-0.495). Spontaneous sympathetic baroreflex gain decreased from rest to RHG exercise ( P = 0.006) and was not impacted by posture ( P = 0.347). During upright RHG exercise, males demonstrated larger increases in MSNA burst amplitude ( P = 0.002) and total MSNA ( P = 0.001) compared with females, which coincided with greater reductions in sympathetic baroreflex gain among males ( P = 0.004). Collectively, these data indicate that acute attenuation of baroreflex-mediated sympathoinhibition permits increases in MSNA during RHG exercise and that males exhibit a greater reserve for efferent sympathetic neural recruitment during orthostasis than females. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The impact of posture and sex on cardiovascular control during rhythmic handgrip (RHG) exercise is unknown. We show that increases in muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) during RHG are partly mediated by a reduction in sympathetic baroreflex gain. In addition, males demonstrate larger increases in total MSNA during upright RHG than females. These data indicate that the baroreflex partly mediates increases in MSNA during RHG and that males have a greater sympathetic vasoconstrictor reserve than females.
- Published
- 2024
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22. An atlas of brain-bone sympathetic neural circuits in mice.
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Ryu V, Gumerova AA, Witztum R, Korkmaz F, Cullen L, Kannangara H, Moldavski O, Barak O, Lizneva D, Goosens KA, Stanley S, Kim SM, Yuen T, and Zaidi M
- Subjects
- Animals, Mice, Herpesvirus 1, Suid physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Brain physiology, Brain metabolism, Bone and Bones innervation, Bone and Bones physiology
- Abstract
There is clear evidence that the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) mediates bone metabolism. Histological studies show abundant SNS innervation of the periosteum and bone marrow-these nerves consist of noradrenergic fibers that immunostain for tyrosine hydroxylase, dopamine beta-hydroxylase, or neuropeptide Y. Nonetheless, the brain sites that send efferent SNS outflow to the bone have not yet been characterized. Using pseudorabies (PRV) viral transneuronal tracing, we report, for the first time, the identification of central SNS outflow sites that innervate bone. We find that the central SNS outflow to bone originates from 87 brain nuclei, sub-nuclei, and regions of six brain divisions, namely the midbrain and pons, hypothalamus, hindbrain medulla, forebrain, cerebral cortex, and thalamus. We also find that certain sites, such as the raphe magnus (RMg) of the medulla and periaqueductal gray (PAG) of the midbrain, display greater degrees of PRV152 infection, suggesting that there is considerable site-specific variation in the levels of central SNS outflow to the bone. This comprehensive compendium illustrating the central coding and control of SNS efferent signals to bone should allow for a greater understanding of the neural regulation of bone metabolism, and importantly and of clinical relevance, mechanisms for central bone pain., Competing Interests: VR, DL, KG, SK Reviewing editor, eLife, AG, RW, FK, LC, HK, OM, OB, SS No competing interests declared, TY Senior editor, eLife, MZ consults for Gershon Lehmann, Guidepoint and Coleman groups, (© 2024, Ryu et al.)
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- 2024
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23. Reflex sympathetic activation to inspiratory muscle loading is attenuated in females relative to males.
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Leahy MG, Busch SA, Thrall SF, Hillen SJ, Sheel AW, and Foster GE
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Sex Factors, Arterial Pressure, Blood Pressure, Work of Breathing, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Respiratory Muscles innervation, Respiratory Muscles physiology, Reflex, Inhalation
- Abstract
Intense inspiratory muscle work can evoke a metabolite-stimulated pressor reflex, commonly referred to as the respiratory muscle metaboreflex. When completing similar relative and absolute levels of inspiratory work, females have an attenuated blood pressure response. We sought to test the hypothesis that the lower blood pressure response to the respiratory muscle metaboreflex in females is associated with a reduced sympathetic response. Healthy young (26 ± 4 yr) males ( n = 9) and females ( n = 7) completed two experimental days. On day 1 , participants completed pulmonary function testing and became familiarized with an inspiratory pressure-threshold loading (PTL) task. On the second day, balloon-tipped catheters were placed in the esophagus and stomach to measure pleural and gastric pressures, and transdiaphragmatic pressure was calculated. A microelectrode was inserted into the fibular nerve to quantify muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA), and participants then completed isocapnic PTL to task failure. There was a significant sex-by-time interaction in the mean arterial pressure (MAP, P = 0.015) and burst frequency ( P = 0.039) response to PTL. Males had a greater rise in MAP (Δ21 ± 9 mmHg) than females (Δ13 ± 5 mmHg, P = 0.026). Males also demonstrated a greater rise in MSNA burst frequency (Δ18 ± 7 bursts/min) than females (Δ10 ± 5 bursts/min, P = 0.015). The effect of sex was observed despite females and males completing the same magnitude of diaphragm work throughout the task ( P = 0.755). Our findings provide novel evidence that the lower blood pressure response to similar relative and absolute inspiratory muscle work in females is associated with lower sympathetic activation. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The blood pressure response to high levels of inspiratory muscle work is lower in females and occurs alongside a reduced sympathetic response. The reduced blood pressure and sympathetic response occur despite males and females performing similar levels of absolute inspiratory work. Our findings provide evidence that sex differences in the respiratory muscle metaboreflex are, in part, sympathetically mediated.
- Published
- 2024
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24. Physiological synchrony in supportive discussions: An examination of co-rumination, relationship type, and heterogeneity.
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DiGiovanni AM, Peters BJ, Tudder A, Gresham AM, and Bolger N
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Sexual Partners psychology, Heart Rate physiology, Adolescent, Friends, Interpersonal Relations, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Social Support
- Abstract
During times of stress, we look to close others for support. Social support conversations are critical for relationship maintenance and well-being. Yet, certain ways of talking about problems-such as co-ruminating-can exacerbate stress. Since social support and co-rumination are both dyadic processes, it is important to examine physiological responses during these conversations in a dyadic manner. Little research has examined physiological synchrony of the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) during social support conversations or co-ruminative conversations. The current research capitalizes on an experimental manipulation of co-rumination using a sample of close friends (147 dyads) and romantic partners (113 dyads) to examine physiological covariation in the context of support. Across both samples, dyads exhibited significant physiological covariation in pre-ejection period reactivity (PEP). Contrary to our hypothesis, dyads in the co-rumination condition did not show more covariation. Close friend dyads did, however, exhibit more covariation as compared to romantic dyads. We also found significant variability in physiological covariation across dyads, with a minority of dyads exhibiting negative covariation of PEP reactivity. The homogeneity of the samples limits the generalizability of the findings and highlights the need for more diverse samples in future work. These findings underline the need for further exploration into the mechanisms that contribute to distinct patterns of physiological synchrony, the conditions in which negative synchrony occurs, and what predicts especially strong positive synchrony. This work extends our understanding of physiological synchrony of the sympathetic nervous system during support conversations and emphasizes the importance of considering heterogeneity in physiological processes., (© 2024 Society for Psychophysiological Research.)
- Published
- 2024
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25. The role of afferent renal nerves in regulating sympathetic outflow via central nervous system mechanisms.
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Katsurada K and Patel KP
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Afferent Pathways physiology, Central Nervous System physiology, Kidney innervation, Kidney physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology
- Published
- 2024
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26. Action potentials in postganglionic sympathetic nerves depend on Na V 1.7.
- Author
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Grisk O
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, NAV1.7 Voltage-Gated Sodium Channel physiology, NAV1.7 Voltage-Gated Sodium Channel genetics, NAV1.7 Voltage-Gated Sodium Channel metabolism, Action Potentials physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology
- Published
- 2024
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27. The left ventricle increases contractility in response to baroreceptor unloading, which is sympathetically mediated in the anesthetized rat.
- Author
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Stewart LC, Wainman L, Ahmadian M, Duffy J, Seethaler R, Mueller PJ, Eves ND, and West CR
- Subjects
- Animals, Male, Rats, Blood Pressure physiology, Blood Pressure drug effects, Arterial Pressure physiology, Arterial Pressure drug effects, Atropine pharmacology, Anesthesia, Propanolamines, Rats, Wistar, Myocardial Contraction physiology, Myocardial Contraction drug effects, Pressoreceptors physiology, Pressoreceptors drug effects, Baroreflex physiology, Baroreflex drug effects, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System drug effects, Heart Ventricles drug effects, Ventricular Function, Left physiology, Ventricular Function, Left drug effects
- Abstract
Contemporary discussion of the baroreflex includes the efferent vascular-sympathetic and cardiovagal arms. Since sympathetic postganglionic neurons also innervate the left ventricle (LV), it is often assumed that the LV produces a sympathetically mediated increase in contractility during baroreceptor unloading, but this has not been characterized using a load-independent index of contractility. We aimed to determine 1 ) whether LV contractility increases in response to baroreceptor unloading and 2 ) whether such increases are mediated via the sympathetic or parasympathetic arm of the autonomic nervous system. Ten male Wistar rats were anesthetized (urethane) and instrumented with arterial and LV pressure-volume catheters to measure mean arterial pressure (MAP) and load-independent LV contractility [maximal rate of increase in pressure adjusted to end-diastolic volume (PAdP/d t
max )], respectively. Rats were placed in a servo-controlled lower-body negative pressure (LBNP) chamber to reduce MAP by 10% for 60 s to mechanically unload baroreceptors under control conditions. LBNP was repeated in each animal following infusions of cardiac autonomic blockers using esmolol (sympathetic), atropine (parasympathetic), and esmolol + atropine. Under control conditions, PAdP/d tmax increased during baroreceptor unloading (26 ± 6 vs. 31 ± 9 mmHg·s-1 ·μL-1 , P = 0.031). During esmolol, there was no increase in LV contractility during baroreceptor unloading (11 ± 2 vs. 12 ± 2, P = 0.125); however, during atropine, there was an increase in LV contractility during baroreceptor unloading (26 ± 6 vs. 31 ± 9, P = 0.019). During combined esmolol and atropine, there was a small increase in contractility versus control (13 ± 3 vs. 15 ± 4, P = 0.046). Our results demonstrate that, in anesthetized rats, LV contractility increases in response to baroreceptor unloading, which is largely sympathetically mediated. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study empirically demonstrates a sympathetically mediated increase in LV contractility in response to baroreceptor unloading using a load-independent index of cardiac contractility in the anesthetized rat.- Published
- 2024
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28. Sympathoinhibition during cardiopulmonary baroreceptor loading is attenuated in older females.
- Author
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Katayama K, Shiozawa K, Lee JB, Kondo H, Seo N, Ishida K, Millar PJ, Banno R, and Ogoh S
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Aged, Young Adult, Muscle, Skeletal innervation, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Age Factors, Blood Pressure physiology, Middle Aged, Lung innervation, Lung physiology, Neural Inhibition, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Pressoreceptors physiology, Aging physiology, Baroreflex
- Abstract
The purpose of the present study was to clarify the impact of age on the sympathoinhibitory response to cardiopulmonary baroreceptor loading in females. Nine older females (mean ± SD, 70 ± 6 yr) and 11 younger females (20 ± 1 yr) completed the study. A passive leg raising (PLR) test was performed wherein the participants were positioned supine (baseline, 0°), and their lower limbs were passively lifted at 10°, 20°, 30°, and 40° (3 min at each angle). Muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) was recorded via microneurography of the left radial nerve. The central venous pressure was estimated based on peripheral venous pressure (eCVP), which was monitored using a cannula in the right large antecubital vein. Baseline MSNA was higher in older females than in younger females. MSNA burst frequency (BF) decreased during the PLR test in both older and younger females, but the magnitude of the decrease in MSNA BF was smaller in older females than in younger females (older, -3.5 ± 1.5 vs. younger, -6.3 ± 1.5 bursts/min at 40° from baseline, P = 0.014). The eCVP increased during the PLR in both groups, and there was no difference in the changes in eCVP between the two groups (older, +1.07 ± 0.37 vs. younger, +1.12 ± 0.33 mmHg at 40° from baseline, P = 0.941). These results suggest that inhibition of sympathetic vasomotor outflow during cardiopulmonary baroreceptor loading could be blunted with advancing age in females. NEW & NOTEWORTHY There were no available data concerning the effect of age on the sympathoinhibitory response to cardiopulmonary baroreceptor loading in females. The magnitude of the decrease in muscle sympathetic nerve activity during passive leg raising (10°-40°) was smaller in older females than in young females. In females, inhibition of sympathetic vasomotor outflow during cardiopulmonary baroreceptor loading could be blunted with advancing age.
- Published
- 2024
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29. Non-additive effects of electrical stimulation of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and the vestibular system on muscle sympathetic nerve activity in humans.
- Author
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McCarthy B, Datta S, Sesa-Ashton G, Wong R, Henderson LA, Dawood T, and Macefield VG
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Adult, Female, Young Adult, Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex physiology, Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation, Electroencephalography methods, Prefrontal Cortex physiology, Electric Stimulation methods, Vestibule, Labyrinth physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Muscle, Skeletal physiology
- Abstract
Sinusoidal galvanic vestibular stimulation (sGVS) induces robust modulation of muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) alongside perceptions of side-to-side movement, sometimes with an accompanying feeling of nausea. We recently showed that transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) also modulates MSNA, but does not generate any perceptions. Here, we tested the hypothesis that when the two stimuli are given concurrently, the modulation of MSNA would be additive. MSNA was recorded from 11 awake participants via a tungsten microelectrode inserted percutaneously into the right common peroneal nerve at the fibular head. Sinusoidal stimuli (± 2 mA, 0.08 Hz, 100 cycles) were applied in randomised order as follows: (i) tACS of the dlPFC at electroencephalogram (EEG) site F4 and referenced to the nasion; (ii) bilateral sGVS applied to the vestibular apparatuses via the mastoid processes; and (iii) tACS and sGVS together. Previously obtained data from 12 participants supplemented the data for stimulation protocols (i) and (ii). Cross-correlation analysis revealed that each stimulation protocol caused significant modulation of MSNA (modulation index (paired data): 35.2 ± 19.4% for sGVS; 27.8 ± 15.2% for tACS), but there were no additive effects when tACS and sGVS were delivered concurrently (32.1 ± 18.5%). This implies that the vestibulosympathetic reflexes are attenuated with concurrent dlPFC stimulation. These results suggest that the dlPFC is capable of blocking the processing of vestibular inputs through the brainstem and, hence, the generation of vestibulosympathetic reflexes., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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30. Effects of acute carotid baroreceptor stimulation on sympathetic nerve traffic in resistant and uncontrolled hypertension: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
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Biffi A, Quarti-Trevano F, Vanoli J, Dell'Oro R, Corrao G, Mancia G, and Grassi G
- Subjects
- Humans, Carotid Sinus innervation, Electric Stimulation Therapy methods, Heart Rate physiology, Baroreflex physiology, Blood Pressure physiology, Hypertension physiopathology, Hypertension therapy, Pressoreceptors physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiopathology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology
- Abstract
In resistant hypertensive patients acute carotid baroreflex stimulation is associated with a blood pressure (BP) reduction, believed to be mediated by a central sympathoinhbition.The evidence for this sympathomodulatory effect is limited, however. This meta-analysis is the first to examine the sympathomodulatory effects of acute carotid baroreflex stimulation in drug-resistant and uncontrolled hypertension, based on the results of microneurographic studies. The analysis included 3 studies assessing muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) and examining 41 resistant uncontrolled hypertensives. The evaluation included assessment of the relationships between MSNA and clinic heart rate and BP changes associated with the procedure. Carotid baroreflex stimulation induced an acute reduction in clinic systolic and diastolic BP which achieved statistical significance for the former variable only [systolic BP: -19.98 mmHg (90% CI, -30.52, -9.43), P < 0.002], [diastolic BP: -5.49 mmHg (90% CI, -11.38, 0.39), P = NS]. These BP changes were accompanied by a significant MSNA reduction [-4.28 bursts/min (90% CI, -8.62, 0.06), P < 0.07], and by a significant heart rate decrease [-3.65 beats/min (90% CI, -5.49, -1.81), P < 0.001]. No significant relationship was detected beween the MSNA, systolic and diastolic BP changes induced by the procedure, this being the case also for heart rate. Our data show that the acute BP lowering responses to carotid baroreflex stimulation, although associated with a significant MSNA reduction, are not quantitatively related to the sympathomoderating effects of the procedure. This may suggest that these BP effects depend only in part on central sympathoinhibition, at least in the acute phase following the intervention., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to The Japanese Society of Hypertension.)
- Published
- 2024
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31. Spinal projecting neurons in rostral ventromedial medulla co-regulate motor and sympathetic tone.
- Author
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Zhang Z, Su J, Tang J, Chung L, Page JC, Winter CC, Liu Y, Kegeles E, Conti S, Zhang Y, Biundo J, Chalif JI, Hua CY, Yang Z, Yao X, Yang Y, Chen S, Schwab JM, Wang KH, Chen C, Prerau MJ, and He Z
- Subjects
- Animals, Male, Mice, Locomotion physiology, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Motor Neurons physiology, Neurons physiology, Sleep, REM physiology, Behavior, Animal, Cell Count, Muscle, Skeletal, Medulla Oblongata physiology, Spinal Cord physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology
- Abstract
Many behaviors require the coordinated actions of somatic and autonomic functions. However, the underlying mechanisms remain elusive. By opto-stimulating different populations of descending spinal projecting neurons (SPNs) in anesthetized mice, we show that stimulation of excitatory SPNs in the rostral ventromedial medulla (rVMM) resulted in a simultaneous increase in somatomotor and sympathetic activities. Conversely, opto-stimulation of rVMM inhibitory SPNs decreased both activities. Anatomically, these SPNs innervate both sympathetic preganglionic neurons and motor-related regions in the spinal cord. Fiber-photometry recording indicated that the activities of rVMM SPNs correlate with different levels of muscle and sympathetic tone during distinct arousal states. Inhibiting rVMM excitatory SPNs reduced basal muscle and sympathetic tone, impairing locomotion initiation and high-speed performance. In contrast, silencing the inhibitory population abolished muscle atonia and sympathetic hypoactivity during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. Together, these results identify rVMM SPNs as descending spinal projecting pathways controlling the tone of both the somatomotor and sympathetic systems., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests Z.H. is a co-founder of Rugen and Myrobalan and an advisor of Axonis., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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32. The effects of electrical stimulation of ventromedial prefrontal cortex on skin sympathetic nerve activity.
- Author
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Patel M, Braun JA, Henderson LA, Dawood T, and Macefield VG
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Electric Stimulation methods, Peroneal Nerve physiology, Functional Laterality physiology, Prefrontal Cortex physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Skin innervation, Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation methods
- Abstract
Skin sympathetic nerve activity (SSNA) is primarily involved in thermoregulation and emotional expression; however, the brain regions involved in the generation of SSNA are not completely understood. In recent years, our laboratory has shown that blood-oxygen-level-dependent signal intensity in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) are positively correlated with bursts of SSNA during emotional arousal and increases in signal intensity in the vmPFC occurring with increases in spontaneous bursts of SSNA even in the resting state. We have recently shown that unilateral transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) of the dlPFC causes modulation of SSNA but given that the current was delivered between electrodes over the dlPFC and the nasion, it is possible that the effects were due to current acting on the vmPFC. To test this, we delivered tACS to target the right vmPFC or dlPFC and nasion and recorded SSNA in 11 healthy participants by inserting a tungsten microelectrode into the right common peroneal nerve. The similarity in SSNA modulation between ipsilateral vmPFC and dlPFC suggests that the ipsilateral vmPFC, rather than the dlPFC, may be causing the modulation of SSNA during ipsilateral dlPFC stimulation., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2024
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33. Effects of Postural Resonance on Skin Sympathetic Nerve Activity and Blood Pressure: A Pilot Study Evaluating Vascular Tone Baroreflex Stimulation Through Biofeedback.
- Author
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Wang H, Wang W, Gao X, Wu D, Lu Q, Li C, Zheng S, and Wang H
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Pilot Projects, Adult, Young Adult, Heart Rate physiology, Baroreflex physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Blood Pressure physiology, Skin blood supply, Skin innervation, Biofeedback, Psychology methods, Biofeedback, Psychology physiology
- Abstract
Heart rate and vascular tension baroreflex exhibit resonance characteristics at approximately 0.1 and 0.03 Hz. In this study, we aimed to induce postural resonance (PR) through rhythmic postural adjustments. To assess the viability of this technique, we investigated the acute impacts of postural resonance on blood pressure, sympathetic nerve activity, and mood. Fifteen healthy study participants, consisting of 8 males and 7 females, were selected for this self-controlled study. Skin sympathetic nerve activity was continuously monitored during both the intervention and stress test on the experimental day. After PR intervention, the diastolic blood pressure and mean arterial pressure in the PR group exhibited significant reductions compared to the CON group (P = 0.032, CON = 71.67 ± 2.348, PR = 64.08 ± 2.35; P = 0.041, CON = 75.00 ± 2.17, PR = 81.67 ± 2.17). After PR intervention both left brachial ankle pulse wave velocity and right brachial ankle pulse wave velocity exhibited a significant reduction compared to pre-intervention levels (from 1115.86 ± 150.08 to 1048.43 ± 127.40 cm/s, p < 0.001; 1103.86 ± 144.35 to 1060.43 ± 121.35 cm/s, p = 0.018). PR intervention also led to a significant decrease in burst frequency and duration (P = 0.049; CON = 8.96 ± 1.17, PR = 5.51 ± 1.17) and a noteworthy decrease in burst amplitude and burst threshold during the cold-pressor test (P = 0.002; P = 0.002). Additionally, VAS scores exhibited a substantial increase following PR (P = 0.035, CON = 28.4 ± 4.49, PR = 42.17 ± 4.10). PR can induce resonance effects within the cardiovascular system, resulting in the effective reduction of blood pressure, skin sympathetic nerve activity and pulse wave velocity, and decreased burst amplitude and burst threshold of the sympathetic nerve during the cold-pressor test., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2024
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34. Effects of intrarenal pelvic infusion of tumour necrosis factor-α and interleukin 1-β on reno-renal reflexes in anaesthetised rats.
- Author
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Abdulla MH, AlMarabeh S, Bolger T, Lucking EF, O'Halloran KD, and Johns EJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Rats, Male, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Heart Rate drug effects, Bradykinin pharmacology, Reflex drug effects, Blood Pressure drug effects, Adenosine administration & dosage, Adenosine pharmacology, Saline Solution, Hypertonic administration & dosage, Saline Solution, Hypertonic pharmacology, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha, Interleukin-1beta pharmacology, Kidney innervation, Kidney drug effects, Sympathetic Nervous System drug effects, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology
- Abstract
Objective: Reno-renal reflexes are disturbed in cardiovascular and hypertensive conditions when elevated levels of pro-inflammatory mediators/cytokines are present within the kidney. We hypothesised that exogenously administered inflammatory cytokines tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) and interleukin (IL)-1β modulate the renal sympatho-excitatory response to chemical stimulation of renal pelvic sensory nerves., Methods: In anaesthetised rats, intrarenal pelvic infusions of vehicle [0.9% sodium chloride (NaCl)], TNF-α (500 and 1000 ng/kg) and IL-1β (1000 ng/kg) were maintained for 30 min before chemical activation of renal pelvic sensory receptors was performed using randomized intrarenal pelvic infusions of hypertonic NaCl, potassium chloride (KCl), bradykinin, adenosine and capsaicin., Results: The increase in renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) in response to intrarenal pelvic hypertonic NaCl was enhanced during intrapelvic TNF-α (1000 ng/kg) and IL-1β infusions by almost 800% above vehicle with minimal changes in mean arterial pressure (MAP) and heart rate (HR). Similarly, the RSNA response to intrarenal pelvic adenosine in the presence of TNF-α (500 ng/kg), but not IL-1β, was almost 200% above vehicle but neither MAP nor HR were changed. There was a blunted sympatho-excitatory response to intrapelvic bradykinin in the presence of TNF-α (1000 ng/kg), but not IL-1β, by almost 80% below vehicle, again without effect on either MAP or HR., Conclusion: The renal sympatho-excitatory response to renal pelvic chemoreceptor stimulation is modulated by exogenous TNF-α and IL-1β. This suggests that inflammatory mediators within the kidney can play a significant role in modulating the renal afferent nerve-mediated sympatho-excitatory response., (Copyright © 2024 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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35. Sex Differences in Sympathetic Responses to Lower-Body Negative Pressure.
- Author
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Jarrard CP, Watso JC, Atkins WC, McKenna ZJ, Foster J, Huang MU, Belval LN, and Crandall CG
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Young Adult, Retrospective Studies, Sex Factors, Middle Aged, Hemodynamics physiology, Blood Pressure physiology, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Muscle, Skeletal innervation, Heart Rate physiology, Syncope physiopathology, Syncope etiology, Lower Body Negative Pressure, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Hemorrhage physiopathology, Hypovolemia physiopathology
- Abstract
Introduction: Trauma-induced hemorrhage is a leading cause of death in prehospital settings. Experimental data demonstrate that females have a lower tolerance to simulated hemorrhage (i.e., central hypovolemia). However, the mechanism(s) underpinning these responses are unknown. Therefore, this study aimed to compare autonomic cardiovascular responses during central hypovolemia between the sexes. We hypothesized that females would have a lower tolerance and smaller increase in muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) to simulated hemorrhage., Methods: Data from 17 females and 19 males, aged 19-45 yr, were retrospectively analyzed. Participants completed a progressive lower-body negative pressure (LBNP) protocol to presyncope to simulate hemorrhagic tolerance with continuous measures of MSNA and beat-to-beat hemodynamic variables. We compared responses at baseline, at two LBNP stages (-40 and -50 mmHg), and at immediately before presyncope. In addition, we compared responses at relative percentages (33%, 66%, and 100%) of hemorrhagic tolerance, calculated via the cumulative stress index (i.e., the sum of the product of time and pressure at each LBNP stage)., Results: Females had lower tolerance to central hypovolemia (female: 561 ± 309 vs male: 894 ± 304 min·mmHg [time·LBNP]; P = 0.003). At LBNP -40 and -50 mmHg, females had lower diastolic blood pressures (main effect of sex: P = 0.010). For the relative LBNP analysis, females exhibited lower MSNA burst frequency (main effect of sex: P = 0.016) accompanied by a lower total vascular conductance (sex: P = 0.028; main effect of sex)., Conclusions: Females have a lower tolerance to central hypovolemia, which was accompanied by lower diastolic blood pressure at -40 and -50 mmHg LBNP. Notably, females had attenuated MSNA responses when assessed as relative LBNP tolerance time., (Copyright © 2024 by the American College of Sports Medicine.)
- Published
- 2024
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36. Spectral changes in skin blood flow during pressure manipulations or sympathetic stimulation.
- Author
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Lima NS, Tzen YT, and Clifford PS
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Young Adult, Forearm blood supply, Cold Temperature, Pressure, Anesthetics, Local pharmacology, Anesthetics, Local administration & dosage, Blood Pressure physiology, Skin blood supply, Laser-Doppler Flowmetry methods, Regional Blood Flow physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology
- Abstract
Skin blood flow is commonly determined by laser Doppler flowmetry (LDF). It has been suggested that pathophysiological conditions can be assessed by analysis of specific frequency domains of the LDF signals. We tested whether physiological stimuli that activate myogenic and neurogenic mechanisms would affect relevant portions of the laser Doppler spectrum. LDF sensors were placed on the right forearm of 14 healthy volunteers for myogenic (six females) and 13 for neurogenic challenge (five females). Myogenic responses were tested by positioning the arm ∼50° above/below heart level. Neurogenic responses were tested by immersing the left hand into an ice slurry with and without topical application of local anaesthetic. Short-time Fourier analyses were computed over the range of 0.06 to 0.15 Hz for myogenic and 0.02 to 0.06 Hz for neurogenic. No significant differences in spectral density were observed (P = 0.40) in the myogenic range with arm above (7 ± 54 × 10
-4 dB) and below heart (7 ± 14 × 10-4 dB). Neurogenic spectral density showed no significant increase from baseline to cold pressor test (0.0017 ± 0.0013 and 0.0038 ± 0.0039 dB; P = 0.087, effect size 0.47). After application of anaesthetic, neurogenic spectral density was unchanged between the baseline and cold pressor test (0.0014 ± 0.0025 and 0.0006 ± 0.0005 dB; P = 0.173). These results suggest that changes in the myogenic and neurogenic spectral density of LDF signals did not fully reflect the skin vascular function activated by pressure manipulation and sympathetic stimulation. Therefore, LDF myogenic and neurogenic spectral density data should be interpreted with caution., (© 2024 The Authors. Experimental Physiology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The Physiological Society.)- Published
- 2024
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37. What Is the Role of the Sympathetic System in Skeletal Muscle?
- Author
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Benarroch E
- Subjects
- Humans, Animals, Sympathetic Nervous System physiopathology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Muscle, Skeletal physiology
- Published
- 2024
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38. Smooth muscle cell-derived Cxcl12 directs macrophage accrual and sympathetic innervation to control thermogenic adipose tissue.
- Author
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Lee D, Benvie AM, Steiner BM, Kolba NJ, Ford JG, McCabe SM, Jiang Y, and Berry DC
- Subjects
- Animals, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Male, Energy Metabolism, Obesity metabolism, Obesity pathology, Thermogenesis, Chemokine CXCL12 metabolism, Macrophages metabolism, Adipose Tissue, Brown metabolism, Adipose Tissue, Brown innervation, Myocytes, Smooth Muscle metabolism, Sympathetic Nervous System metabolism, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology
- Abstract
Sympathetic innervation of brown adipose tissue (BAT) controls mammalian adaptative thermogenesis. However, the cellular and molecular underpinnings contributing to BAT innervation remain poorly defined. Here, we show that smooth muscle cells (SMCs) support BAT growth, lipid utilization, and thermogenic plasticity. Moreover, we find that BAT SMCs express and control the bioavailability of Cxcl12. SMC deletion of Cxcl12 fosters brown adipocyte lipid accumulation, reduces energy expenditure, and increases susceptibility to diet-induced metabolic dysfunction. Mechanistically, we find that Cxcl12 stimulates CD301
+ macrophage recruitment and supports sympathetic neuronal maintenance. Administering recombinant Cxcl12 to obese mice or leptin-deficient (Ob/Ob) mice is sufficient to boost macrophage presence and drive sympathetic innervation to restore BAT morphology and thermogenic responses. Altogether, our data reveal an SMC chemokine-dependent pathway linking immunological infiltration and sympathetic innervation as a rheostat for BAT maintenance and thermogenesis., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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39. GLP-1 in the Hypothalamic Paraventricular Nucleus Promotes Sympathetic Activation and Hypertension.
- Author
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Xu XY, Wang JX, Chen JL, Dai M, Wang YM, Chen Q, Li YH, Zhu GQ, and Chen AD
- Subjects
- Animals, Male, Rats, Blood Pressure drug effects, Blood Pressure physiology, Rats, Inbred WKY, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Paraventricular Hypothalamic Nucleus drug effects, Paraventricular Hypothalamic Nucleus metabolism, Hypertension physiopathology, Hypertension metabolism, Sympathetic Nervous System drug effects, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Rats, Inbred SHR, Glucagon-Like Peptide 1 metabolism, Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Receptor metabolism, Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 Receptor antagonists & inhibitors
- Abstract
Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) and its analogs are widely used for diabetes treatment. The paraventricular nucleus (PVN) is crucial for regulating cardiovascular activity. This study aims to determine the roles of GLP-1 and its receptors (GLP-1R) in the PVN in regulating sympathetic outflow and blood pressure. Experiments were carried out in male normotensive rats and spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). Renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) and mean arterial pressure (MAP) were recorded. GLP-1 and GLP-1R expressions were present in the PVN. PVN microinjection of GLP-1R agonist recombinant human GLP-1 (rhGLP-1) or EX-4 increased RSNA and MAP, which were prevented by GLP-1R antagonist exendin 9-39 (EX9-39) or GLP-1R antagonist 1, superoxide scavenger tempol, antioxidant N-acetylcysteine, NADPH oxidase (NOX) inhibitor apocynin, adenylyl cyclase (AC) inhibitor SQ22536 or protein kinase A (PKA) inhibitor H89. PVN microinjection of rhGLP-1 increased superoxide production, NADPH oxidase activity, cAMP level, AC, and PKA activity, which were prevented by SQ22536 or H89. GLP-1 and GLP-1R were upregulated in the PVN of SHR. PVN microinjection of GLP-1 agonist increased RSNA and MAP in both WKY and SHR, but GLP-1 antagonists caused greater effects in reducing RSNA and MAP in SHR than in WKY. The increased superoxide production and NADPH oxidase activity in the PVN of SHR were augmented by GLP-1R agonists but attenuated by GLP-1R antagonists. These results indicate that activation of GLP-1R in the PVN increased sympathetic outflow and blood pressure via cAMP-PKA-mediated NADPH oxidase activation and subsequent superoxide production. GLP-1 and GLP-1R upregulation in the PVN partially contributes to sympathetic overactivity and hypertension., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interests., (Copyright © 2024 the authors.)
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- 2024
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40. Short-term meditation training alters brain activity and sympathetic responses at rest, but not during meditation.
- Author
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Rusinova A, Volodina M, and Ossadtchi A
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Rest physiology, Electroencephalography, Heart Rate physiology, Middle Aged, Galvanic Skin Response physiology, Young Adult, Meditation methods, Brain physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology
- Abstract
Although more people are engaging in meditation practices that require specialized training, few studies address the issues associated with nervous activity pattern changes brought about by such training. For beginners, it remains unclear how much practice is needed before objective physiological changes can be detected, whether or not they are similar across the novices and what are the optimal strategies to track these changes. To clarify these questions we recruited individuals with no prior meditation experience. The experimental group underwent an eight-week Taoist meditation course administered by a professional, while the control group listened to audiobooks. Both groups participated in audio-guided, 34-min long meditation sessions before and after the 8-week long intervention. Their EEG, photoplethysmogram, respiration, and skin conductance were recorded during the mediation and resting state periods. Compared to the control group, the experimental group exhibited band-specific topically organized changes of the resting state brain activity and heart rate variability associated with sympathetic system activation. Importantly, no significant changes were found during the meditation process prior and post the 8-week training in either of the groups. The absence of notable changes in CNS and ANS activity indicators during meditation sessions, for both the experimental and control groups, casts doubt on the effectiveness of wearable biofeedback devices in meditation practice. This finding redirects focus to the importance of monitoring resting state activity to evaluate progress in beginner meditators. Also, 16 h of training is not enough for forming individual objectively different strategies manifested during the meditation sessions. Our results contributed to the development of tools to objectively monitor the progress in novice meditators and the choice of the relevant monitoring strategies. According to our findings, in order to track early changes brought about by the meditation practice it is preferable to monitor brain activity outside the actual meditation sessions., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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41. Influence of sex and sedentary conditions on sympathetic burst characteristics in prepubertal, postpubertal, and young adult rats.
- Author
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Desai SA, Mirza UA, and Mueller PJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Male, Rats, Sedentary Behavior, Sex Characteristics, Physical Conditioning, Animal physiology, Splanchnic Nerves physiology, Sex Factors, Sexual Maturation physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Blood Pressure physiology, Rats, Sprague-Dawley
- Abstract
Recent evidence indicates that sex-based differences in cardiovascular disease (CVD) begin early in life, particularly when associated with risk factors such as a sedentary lifestyle. CVD is associated with elevated sympathetic nerve activity (SNA), quantified as increased SNA burst activity in humans. Whether burst characteristics are influenced by sex or sedentary conditions at younger ages is unknown. The purpose of our study is to compare SNA bursts in active and sedentary female and male rats at ages including prepuberty and young adulthood. We hypothesized that burst characteristics and blood pressure are higher under sedentary conditions and lower in female rats compared with males. We analyzed splanchnic SNA (SpSNA) recordings from Inactin-anesthetized male and female rats at 4-, 8-, and 16-wk of age. Physically active and sedentary rats were each housed in separate, environmentally controlled chambers where physically active rats had free access to an in-cage running wheel. Sympathetic bursts were obtained by rectifying and integrating the raw SpSNA signal. Burst frequency, burst height, and burst width were calculated using the Peak Parameters extension in LabChart. Our results showed that sedentary conditions produced a greater burst width in 8- and 16-wk-old rats compared with 4-wk-old rats in both males and females ( P < 0.001 for both). Burst frequency and incidence were both higher in 16-wk-old males compared with 16-wk-old females ( P < 0.001 for both). Our results suggest that there are sedentary lifestyle- and sex-related mechanisms that impact sympathetic regulation of blood pressure at ages that range from prepuberty into young adulthood. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The mechanisms of decreased incidence of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in reproductive-age women compared with age-matched men are unknown. The strong association between elevated sympathetic activity and CVD led us to characterize splanchnic sympathetic bursts in female and male rats. Prepubescent males and females exhibited narrower sympathetic bursts, whereas young adult males had higher resting burst frequency compared with age-matched females. Sex-based regulation of sympathetic activity suggests a need for sex-dependent therapeutic strategies to combat CVD.
- Published
- 2024
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42. The sympathetic nervous system arose in the earliest vertebrates.
- Author
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Ernsberger U and Rohrer H
- Subjects
- Animals, Fossils, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Vertebrates anatomy & histology, Vertebrates physiology, Biological Evolution
- Published
- 2024
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43. Neural crest origin of sympathetic neurons at the dawn of vertebrates.
- Author
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Edens BM, Stundl J, Urrutia HA, and Bronner ME
- Subjects
- Animals, Dopamine beta-Hydroxylase metabolism, Dopamine beta-Hydroxylase genetics, Ganglia, Sympathetic cytology, Ganglia, Sympathetic metabolism, Petromyzon anatomy & histology, Petromyzon embryology, Petromyzon genetics, Tyrosine 3-Monooxygenase metabolism, Tyrosine 3-Monooxygenase genetics, Embryonic Stem Cells cytology, Embryonic Stem Cells metabolism, Aorta anatomy & histology, Aorta embryology, Catecholamines biosynthesis, Catecholamines metabolism, Biosynthetic Pathways, Biological Evolution, Cell Lineage, Neural Crest cytology, Neural Crest metabolism, Neurons cytology, Neurons metabolism, Sympathetic Nervous System cytology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Vertebrates anatomy & histology, Vertebrates embryology, Vertebrates genetics
- Abstract
The neural crest is an embryonic stem cell population unique to vertebrates
1 whose expansion and diversification are thought to have promoted vertebrate evolution by enabling emergence of new cell types and structures such as jaws and peripheral ganglia2 . Although jawless vertebrates have sensory ganglia, convention has it that trunk sympathetic chain ganglia arose only in jawed vertebrates3-8 . Here, by contrast, we report the presence of trunk sympathetic neurons in the sea lamprey, Petromyzon marinus, an extant jawless vertebrate. These neurons arise from sympathoblasts near the dorsal aorta that undergo noradrenergic specification through a transcriptional program homologous to that described in gnathostomes. Lamprey sympathoblasts populate the extracardiac space and extend along the length of the trunk in bilateral streams, expressing the catecholamine biosynthetic pathway enzymes tyrosine hydroxylase and dopamine β-hydroxylase. CM-DiI lineage tracing analysis further confirmed that these cells derive from the trunk neural crest. RNA sequencing of isolated ammocoete trunk sympathoblasts revealed gene profiles characteristic of sympathetic neuron function. Our findings challenge the prevailing dogma that posits that sympathetic ganglia are a gnathostome innovation, instead suggesting that a late-developing rudimentary sympathetic nervous system may have been characteristic of the earliest vertebrates., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.)- Published
- 2024
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44. The effect of hyperoxia on muscle sympathetic nerve activity: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
- Author
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Young DA, Jones PAT, Matenchuk BA, Sivak A, Davenport MH, and Steinback CD
- Subjects
- Humans, Heart Rate physiology, Hyperoxia physiopathology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiopathology, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Muscle, Skeletal innervation
- Abstract
Purpose: We conducted a meta-analysis to determine the effect of hyperoxia on muscle sympathetic nerve activity in healthy individuals and those with cardio-metabolic diseases., Methods: A comprehensive search of electronic databases was performed until August 2022. All study designs (except reviews) were included: population (humans; apparently healthy or with at least one chronic disease); exposures (muscle sympathetic nerve activity during hyperoxia or hyperbaria); comparators (hyperoxia or hyperbaria vs. normoxia); and outcomes (muscle sympathetic nerve activity, heart rate, blood pressure, minute ventilation). Forty-nine studies were ultimately included in the meta-analysis., Results: In healthy individuals, hyperoxia had no effect on sympathetic burst frequency (mean difference [MD] - 1.07 bursts/min; 95% confidence interval [CI] - 2.17, 0.04bursts/min; P = 0.06), burst incidence (MD 0.27 bursts/100 heartbeats [hb]; 95% CI - 2.10, 2.64 bursts/100 hb; P = 0.82), burst amplitude (P = 0.85), or total activity (P = 0.31). In those with chronic diseases, hyperoxia decreased burst frequency (MD - 5.57 bursts/min; 95% CI - 7.48, - 3.67 bursts/min; P < 0.001) and burst incidence (MD - 4.44 bursts/100 hb; 95% CI - 7.94, - 0.94 bursts/100 hb; P = 0.01), but had no effect on burst amplitude (P = 0.36) or total activity (P = 0.90). Our meta-regression analyses identified an inverse relationship between normoxic burst frequency and change in burst frequency with hyperoxia. In both groups, hyperoxia decreased heart rate but had no effect on any measure of blood pressure., Conclusion: Hyperoxia does not change sympathetic activity in healthy humans. Conversely, in those with chronic diseases, hyperoxia decreases sympathetic activity. Regardless of disease status, resting sympathetic burst frequency predicts the degree of change in burst frequency, with larger decreases for those with higher resting activity., (© 2024. Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany.)
- Published
- 2024
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45. Intra- and interday reliability of sympathetic transduction to blood pressure in young, healthy adults.
- Author
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Teixeira AL, Nardone M, Fernandes IA, Millar PJ, and Vianna LC
- Subjects
- Young Adult, Humans, Blood Pressure physiology, Reproducibility of Results, Heart Rate physiology, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology
- Abstract
Microneurographic recordings of muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) and the succeeding changes in beat-to-beat blood pressure (i.e., sympathetic transduction) provide important insights into the neural control of the circulation in humans. Despite its widespread use, the reliability of this technique remains unknown. Herein, we assessed the intra- and interday test-retest reliability of signal-averaging sympathetic transduction to blood pressure. Data were analyzed from 15 (9 M/6 F) young, healthy participants who completed two baseline recordings of fibular nerve MSNA separated by 60 min (intraday). The interday reliability was obtained in a subset of participants ( n = 13, 9 M/4 F) who completed a follow-up MSNA study. Signal-averaging sympathetic transduction was quantified as peak change in diastolic (DBP) and mean arterial pressure (MAP) following a burst of MSNA. Analyses were also computed considering different MSNA burst sizes (quartiles of normalized MSNA) and burst patterns (singlets, couplets, triplets, and quadruplets+), as well as nonburst responses. Intraclass-correlation coefficients (ICCs) were used as the main reliability measure. Peak changes in MAP [intraday: ICC = 0.76 (0.30-0.92), P = 0.006; interday: ICC = 0.91 (0.63-0.97), P < 0.001] demonstrated very good to excellent reliability. Sympathetic transduction of MSNA burst size displayed moderate to very good reliability, though the reliability of MSNA burst pattern was poor to very good. Nonburst responses revealed poor intraday [ICC = 0.37 (-1.05 to 0.80), P = 0.21], but very good interday [ICC = 0.76 (0.18-0.93), P = 0.01] reliability. Intraday reliability measures were consistently lower than interday reliability. Similar results were obtained using DBP. Collectively, these findings provide evidence that the burst-triggering signal-averaging technique is a reliable measure of sympathetic transduction to blood pressure in young, healthy adults. NEW & NOTEWORTHY We found that signal-averaging sympathetic transduction to blood pressure displayed very good to excellent intra- and interday test-retest reliability in healthy, young adults. Reliability analyses according to muscle sympathetic burst size, burst pattern, and nonburst response were less consistent. Results were similar when using diastolic or mean arterial pressure in the transduction calculation. These findings suggest that the signal-averaging technique can be used with confidence to investigate sympathetic transduction to blood pressure in humans across time.
- Published
- 2024
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46. Analysis of sympathetic responses to cognitive stress and pain through skin sympathetic nerve activity and electrodermal activity.
- Author
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Baghestani F, Kong Y, D'Angelo W, and Chon KH
- Subjects
- Humans, Pain, Electrocardiography methods, Cognition, Galvanic Skin Response, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology
- Abstract
We explored the non-invasive evaluation of the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) by employing two distinct physiological signals: skin sympathetic nerve activity (SKNA), extracted from electrocardiogram (ECG) signals, and electrodermal activity (EDA), a well-studied marker in the context of the SNS assessment. Our investigation focused on cognitive stress and pain; two conditions closely associated with the SNS. We sought to determine if the information and dynamics of EDA could be derived from the novel SKNA signal. To this end, ECG and EDA signals were recorded simultaneously during three experiments aimed at sympathetic stimulation, Valsalva maneuver (VM), Stroop test, and thermal-grill pain test. We calculated the integral area under the rectified SKNA signal (iSKNA) and decomposed the EDA signal to its phasic component (EDA
phasic ). An average delay of more than 4.6 s was observed in the onset of EDAphasic bursts compared to their corresponding iSKNA bursts. After shifting the EDAphasic segments by the extent of this delay and smoothing the corresponding iSKNA bursts, our results revealed a strong average correlation coefficient of 0.85±0.14 between the iSKNA and EDAphasic bursts, indicating a noteworthy similarity between the two signals. We also reconstructed the EDA signals with time-varying sympathetic (TVSymp) and modified TVSymp (MTVSymp) methods. Then we extracted the following features from iSKNA, EDAphasic , TVSymp, and MTVSymp signals: peak amplitude, average amplitude (aSKNA), standard deviation (vSKNA), and the cumulative duration during which the signals had higher amplitudes than a specified threshold (HaSKNA). A strong average correlation of 0.89±0.18 was found between vSKNA and subjects' self-rated pain levels during the pain test. Our statistical analysis also included applying Linear Mixed-Effects Models to check if there were significant differences in features across baseline and different levels of SNS stimulation. We then assessed the discriminating power of the features using Area Under the Receiver Operating Characteristic Curve (AUROC) and Fisher's Ratio. Finally, using all the four EDA features, a multi-layer perceptron (MLP) classifier reached the classification accuracies 95.56%, 89.29%, and 67.88% for the VM, Stroop, and thermal-grill pain control and stimulation classes. On the other hand, the highest classification accuracies based on SKNA features were achieved using K-nearest neighbors (KNN) (98.89%), KNN (89.29%), and MLP (95.11%) classifiers for the same experiments. Our comparative analysis showed the feasibility of SKNA as a novel tool for assessing the SNS with accurate classification capability, with a faster onset of amplitude increase in response to SNS activity, compared to EDA., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest All authors have nothing to declare., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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47. Differential responses to UCP1 ablation in classical brown versus beige fat, despite a parallel increase in sympathetic innervation.
- Author
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Naren Q, Lindsund E, Bokhari MH, Pang W, and Petrovic N
- Subjects
- Animals, Mice, Adipose Tissue, White metabolism, Adrenergic Agents metabolism, Monoamine Oxidase genetics, Monoamine Oxidase metabolism, Norepinephrine metabolism, Mice, Knockout, Acclimatization genetics, Macrophages metabolism, Adipose Tissue, Beige innervation, Adipose Tissue, Beige metabolism, Adipose Tissue, Brown innervation, Adipose Tissue, Brown metabolism, Thermogenesis genetics, Uncoupling Protein 1 genetics, Uncoupling Protein 1 metabolism, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology
- Abstract
In the cold, the absence of the mitochondrial uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) results in hyper-recruitment of beige fat, but classical brown fat becomes atrophied. Here we examine possible mechanisms underlying this phenomenon. We confirm that in brown fat from UCP1-knockout (UCP1-KO) mice acclimated to the cold, the levels of mitochondrial respiratory chain proteins were diminished; however, in beige fat, the mitochondria seemed to be unaffected. The macrophages that accumulated massively not only in brown fat but also in beige fat of the UCP1-KO mice acclimated to cold did not express tyrosine hydroxylase, the norepinephrine transporter (NET) and monoamine oxidase-A (MAO-A). Consequently, they could not influence the tissues through the synthesis or degradation of norepinephrine. Unexpectedly, in the cold, both brown and beige adipocytes from UCP1-KO mice acquired an ability to express MAO-A. Adipose tissue norepinephrine was exclusively of sympathetic origin, and sympathetic innervation significantly increased in both tissues of UCP1-KO mice. Importantly, the magnitude of sympathetic innervation and the expression levels of genes induced by adrenergic stimulation were much higher in brown fat. Therefore, we conclude that no qualitative differences in innervation or macrophage character could explain the contrasting reactions of brown versus beige adipose tissues to UCP1-ablation. Instead, these contrasting responses may be explained by quantitative differences in sympathetic innervation: the beige adipose depot from the UCP1-KO mice responded to cold acclimation in a canonical manner and displayed enhanced recruitment, while the atrophy of brown fat lacking UCP1 may be seen as a consequence of supraphysiological adrenergic stimulation in this tissue., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest with the contents of this article., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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48. Limb-specific muscle sympathetic nerve activity responses to the cold pressor test.
- Author
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Coovadia Y, Schwende BK, Taylor CE, and Usselman CW
- Subjects
- Humans, Blood Pressure physiology, Muscle, Skeletal physiology, Hemodynamics, Heart Rate physiology, Cold Temperature, Arterial Pressure, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology
- Abstract
Recent studies have demonstrated that muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) responses to isometric exercise differs between active and inactive limbs. Whether limb-dependent responses are characteristic of responses to the cold pressor test (CPT) remains to be established. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that CPT-induced MSNA responses differ between affected and unaffected limbs such that MSNA in the affected lower limb is greater than MSNA responses in the contralateral lower limb and the upper limb. Integrated peroneal MSNA (microneurography) was measured in young healthy individuals (n = 10) at rest and during three separate 3-min CPTs: the microneurography foot, opposite foot, and opposite hand. Peak MSNA responses were extracted for further analysis, as well as corresponding hemodynamic outcomes including mean arterial pressure (MAP; Finometer). MSNA responses were greater when the microneurography foot was immersed in ice water than when the opposite foot was immersed (38 ± 18 vs 28 ± 16 bursts/100hb: P < 0.01). MSNA responses when the opposite hand was immersed were greater than both the microneurography foot (46 ± 22 vs 38 ± 18 bursts/100hb: P < 0.01) and opposite foot (46 ± 22 vs 28 ± 16 bursts/100hb: P ≤0.01). Likewise, MAP responses were greater during the hand CPT than the microneurography foot (99 ± 9 vs 96 ± 8 mmHg: P < 0.01) and opposite foot CPT (99 ± 9 vs 96 ± 9 mmHg: P < 0.01). These data indicate that (a) upper limbs and (b) immersed limbs elicit greater MSNA responses to the CPT than lower and/or non-immersed limbs., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. rs1801253 Gly/Gly carriage in the ADRB1 gene leads to unbalanced cardiac sympathetic modulation as assessed by spectral analysis of heart rate variability.
- Author
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Grossini E, De Zanet D, Apostolo D, Mallela VR, La Rocca G, Greco A, Coratza G, Minisini R, and Pirisi M
- Subjects
- Humans, Heart Rate, Receptors, Adrenergic, beta-1 genetics, Heart, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Relationship between muscle sympathetic nerve activity and rapid increases in circulating leukocytes during experimental muscle pain.
- Author
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Daria C, Lancaster G, Murphy AJ, Henderson LA, Dawood T, and Macefield VG
- Subjects
- Humans, Muscle, Skeletal innervation, Leukocytes, Blood Pressure, Heart Rate, Myalgia, Sympathetic Nervous System physiology
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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