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Mental stress causes vasoconstriction in subjects with sickle cell disease and in normal controls

Authors :
Jon A Detterich
John C. Wood
Roberta M. Kato
Richard Sposto
John B. Sunwoo
Maha Khaleel
Saranya Veluswamy
Wanwara Thuptimdang
Lonnie K. Zeltzer
Michael C.K. Khoo
Payal Shah
Patjanaporn Chalacheva
Thomas D. Coates
Source :
Haematologica
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Ferrata Storti Foundation, 2020.

Abstract

Vaso-occlusive crisis (VOC) is a hallmark of sickle cell disease (SCD) and occurs when deoxygenated sickled red blood cells occlude the microvasculature. Any stimulus, such as mental stress, which decreases microvascular blood flow will increase the likelihood of red cell entrapment resulting in local vaso-occlusion and progression to VOC. Neurally mediated vasoconstriction might be the physiological link between crisis triggers and vaso-occlusion. In this study, we determined the effect of mental stress on microvascular blood flow and autonomic nervous system reactivity. Sickle cell patients and controls performed mentally stressful tasks, including a memory task, conflict test and pain anticipation test. Blood flow was measured using photoplethysmography, autonomic reactivity was derived from electrocardiography and perceived stress was measured by the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory questionnaire. Stress tasks induced a significant decrease in microvascular blood flow, parasympathetic withdrawal and sympathetic activation in all subjects. Of the various tests, pain anticipation caused the highest degree of vasoconstriction. The magnitude of vasoconstriction, sympathetic activation and perceived stress was greater during the Stroop conflict test than during the N-back memory test, indicating the relationship between magnitude of experimental stress and degree of regional vasoconstriction. Baseline anxiety had a significant effect on the vasoconstrictive response in sickle cell subjects but not in controls. In conclusion, mental stress caused vasoconstriction and autonomic nervous system reactivity in all subjects. Although the pattern of responses was not significantly different between the two groups, the consequences of vasoconstriction can be quite significant in SCD because of the resultant entrapment of sickle cells in the microvasculature. This suggests that mental stress can precipitate a VOC in SCD by causing neural-mediated vasoconstriction.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15928721 and 03906078
Volume :
105
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Haematologica
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2896802351efb9e675efe53761e3d5a1