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Interactions between CO2 chemoreflexes and arterial baroreflexesWe studied interactions between CO2 chemoreflexes and arterial baroreflexes in 10 supine healthy young men and women. We measured vagal carotid baroreceptor-cardiac reflexes and steady-state fast Fourier transform R-R interval and photoplethysmographic arterial pressure power spectra at three arterial pressure levels (nitroprusside, saline, and phenylephrine infusions) and three end-tidal CO2 levels (3, 4, and 5%, fixed-frequency, large-tidal-volume breathing, CO2 plus O2). Our study supports three principal conclusions. First, although low levels of CO2 chemoreceptor stimulation reduce R-R intervals and R-R interval variability, statistical modeling suggests that this effect is indirect rather than direct and is mediated by reductions of arterial pressure. Second, reductions of R-R intervals during hypocapnia reflect simple shifting of vagally mediated carotid baroreflex responses on the R-R interval axis rather than changes of baroreflex gain, range, or operational point. Third, the influence of CO2 chemoreceptor stimulation on arterial pressure (and, derivatively, on R-R intervals and R-R interval variability) depends critically on baseline arterial pressure levels: chemoreceptor effects are smaller when pressure is low and larger when arterial pressure is high.
Document ID
20040172649
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Henry, R. A.
(Hunter Holmes McGuire Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center Richmond, Virginia 23249, United States)
Lu, I. L.
Beightol, L. A.
Eckberg, D. L.
Date Acquired
August 22, 2013
Publication Date
June 1, 1998
Publication Information
Publication: The American journal of physiology
Volume: 274
Issue: 6 Pt 2
ISSN: 0002-9513
Subject Category
Life Sciences (General)
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: HL-07556
CONTRACT_GRANT: HL-22296
CONTRACT_GRANT: HL-30506
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
NASA Discipline Cardiopulmonary
Non-NASA Center

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