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The interactive effects of posture and biological sex on the control of muscle sympathetic nerve activity during rhythmic handgrip exercise.

Authors :
D'Souza, Andrew W.
Moore, Jonathan P.
Manabe, Kazumasa
Lawley, Justin S.
Washio, Takuro
Hissen, Sarah L.
Sanchez, Belinda
Fu, Qi
Source :
American Journal of Physiology: Regulatory, Integrative & Comparative Physiology. Aug2024, Vol. 327 Issue 2, pR133-R144. 12p.
Publication Year :
2024

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. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03636119
Volume :
327
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
American Journal of Physiology: Regulatory, Integrative & Comparative Physiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178858440
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.00055.2024