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Do vestibular otolith organs participate in human orthostatic blood pressure control?We hypothesized that vestibular otolith organ stimulation contributes to human orthostatic responses. Twelve subjects underwent three 60 degrees upright tilts: (1) with the neck flexed from 0 degrees to 30 degrees relative to the body during 60 degrees tilt, such that the head moved from horizontal to 90 degrees above horizontal (0 to 1 Gz otolith stimulation); (2) with the head and body aligned, such that they tilted together to 60 degrees (0 to 0.87 Gz otolith stimulation); and (3) with the neck flexed 30 degrees relative to the body during supine conditions, and the neck then extended to -30 degrees during 60 degrees body tilting, such that the head remained at 30 degrees above horizontal throughout body tilting (constant 0.5 Gz otolith stimulation). All three tilt procedures increased thoracic impedance, sympathetic nerve activity (N = 8 of 12), arterial pressure, and heart rate relative to supine conditions (all P < 0.04). Within the first 20 s of tilt, arterial pressure increased most obviously in the 0 to 1 Gz otolith condition. Thoracic impedance tended to increase more in otolith-constant conditions, but no dependent variable differed significantly between tilt conditions, and no significant time x tilt interactions emerged. Otolith inputs may contribute to early transient adjustments to orthostasis. However, lack of significant main effects of tilt condition and time x tilt interactions suggests that potential otolith effects on the variables we studied are relatively subtle and ephemeral, or that other mechanisms compensate for a lack of change in otolith input with orthostasis.
Document ID
20040088003
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Watenpaugh, Donald E.
(University of North Texas Health Science Center, Department of Integrative Physiology Fort Worth 76107, United States)
Cothron, Adriena V.
Wasmund, Stephen L.
Wasmund, Wendy L.
Carter, Robert 3rd
Muenter, Nicolette K.
Smith, Michael L.
Date Acquired
August 21, 2013
Publication Date
September 30, 2002
Publication Information
Publication: Autonomic neuroscience : basic & clinical
Volume: 100
Issue: 1-2
ISSN: 1566-0702
Subject Category
Life Sciences (General)
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
Non-NASA Center
NASA Discipline Regulatory Physiology
Clinical Trial

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