Functional sympatholysis and sympathetic escape in a theoretical model for blood flow regulation
نویسندگان
چکیده
A mathematical simulation of flow regulation in vascular networks is used to investigate the interaction between arteriolar vasoconstriction due to sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) and vasodilation due to increased oxygen demand. A network with 13 vessel segments in series is used, each segment representing a different size range of arterioles or venules. The network includes five actively regulating arteriolar segments with time-dependent diameters influenced by shear stress, wall tension, metabolic regulation, and SNA. Metabolic signals are assumed to be propagated upstream along vessel walls via a conducted response. The model exhibits functional sympatholysis, in which sympathetic vasoconstriction is partially abrogated by increases in metabolic demand, and sympathetic escape, in which SNA elicits an initial vasoconstriction followed by vasodilation. In accordance with experimental observations, these phenomena are more prominent in small arterioles than in larger arterioles when SNA is assumed to act equally on arterioles of all sizes. The results imply that a mechanism based on the competing effects on arteriolar tone of SNA and conducted metabolic signals can account for several observed characteristics of functional sympatholysis, including the different responses of large and small arterioles.
منابع مشابه
"Functional sympatholysis" in the present concept does not exist: arteriovenous pumping, supplied by capillary pumps, explains immediate exercise hyperemia.
TO THE EDITOR: We read with great interest Dr. Casey and colleagues’ (1) investigations aimed at discovering the causes of substantial reduction in forearm blood flow under hyperoxia. In our opinion, they concluded quite rightly that “functional sympatholysis” (one of the most cited, yet half a century old notion) is far from explaining the observed reduction and that it does not have a vasocon...
متن کاملSympathetic Vasoconstriction in Skeletal Muscle: Adaptations to Exercise Training.
JUST, T.P., I.R. COOPER, and D.S. DELOREY. Sympathetic vasoconstriction in skeletal muscle: adaptations to exercise training. Exerc. Sport Sci. Rev., Vol. 44, No. 4, pp. 137–143, 2016. Sympathetic vasoconstriction in the skeletal muscle vascular bed is essential for the regulation of vascular resistance and therefore control of blood pressure and muscle blood flow at rest and during exercise. I...
متن کاملAbnormal cardiovascular response to exercise in hypertension: contribution of neural factors.
During both dynamic (e.g., endurance) and static (e.g., strength) exercise there are exaggerated cardiovascular responses in hypertension. This includes greater increases in blood pressure, heart rate, and efferent sympathetic nerve activity than in normal controls. Two of the known neural factors that contribute to this abnormal cardiovascular response are the exercise pressor reflex (EPR) and...
متن کاملDifferential effects of nebivolol versus metoprolol on functional sympatholysis in hypertensive humans.
In young healthy humans, sympathetic vasoconstriction is markedly blunted during exercise to optimize blood flow to the metabolically active muscle. This phenomenon known as functional sympatholysis is impaired in hypertensive humans and rats by angiotensin II-dependent mechanisms, involving oxidative stress and inactivation of nitric oxide (NO). Nebivolol is a β1-adrenergic receptor blocker th...
متن کاملLetter to the editor: "Deconstructing the dogma of sympathetic restraint and its role in the cardiovascular response to exercise".
TO THE EDITOR: I read with great interest and excitement the recently published work of Heinonen et al. (2) in which PET scan technology, pharmacological infusion, and a single leg knee extension exercise model were combined to interrogate the role of sympathetic adrenergic regulation of human cardiovascular function in exercise. Specifically, they assessed the independent responses to femoral ...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
دوره 5 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2014