Does Reduced Vascular Stiffening Fully Explain Preserved Cardiovagal Baroreflex Function in Older, Physically Active Men?

نویسندگان

  • Brian E. Hunt
  • William B. Farquhar
  • Andrew Taylor
چکیده

Background—We measured cardiovagal baroreflex gain and its vascular mechanical and neural components during dynamic baroreflex engagement in 10 young untrained men, 6 older untrained men, and 12 older, physically active men. Methods and Results—Our newly developed assessment of beat-to-beat carotid diameters during baroreflex engagement estimates the mechanical transduction of pressure into barosensory stretch (Ddiameter/Dpressure), the neural transduction of stretch into vagal outflow (DR-R interval/Ddiameter), and conventional integrated cardiovagal baroreflex gain (DR-R interval/Dpressure). Integrated gain was lower in older untrained men than in young untrained men (6.861.2 versus 15.761.8 ms/mm Hg) due to both lower mechanical (9.161.0 versus 17.162.4 mm Hg/mm) and lower neural (0.5760.10 versus 0.9060.10 ms/mm) transduction. Integrated gain in older active men (13.362.7 ms/mm Hg) was comparable to that in young untrained men. This was achieved through mechanical transduction (12.161.4 mm Hg/mm) that was modestly higher than that in older untrained men and neural transduction (1.0060.20 ms/mm) comparable to that in young untrained men. Across groups, both mechanical and neural components were related to integrated gain; however, the neural component carried greater predictive weight (b50.789 versus 0.588). Conclusions—Both vascular and neural deficits contribute to age-related declines in cardiovagal baroreflex gain; however, long-term physical activity attenuates this decline by maintaining neural vagal control. (Circulation. 2001;103:24242427.)

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تاریخ انتشار 2001