Coronary blood flow responses to physiological stress in humans

Afsana Momen, Vernon Mascarenhas, Amir Gahremanpour, Zhaohui Gao, Raman Moradkhan, Allen Kunselman, John P Boehmer, Lawrence I Sinoway, Urs A Leuenberger, Afsana Momen, Vernon Mascarenhas, Amir Gahremanpour, Zhaohui Gao, Raman Moradkhan, Allen Kunselman, John P Boehmer, Lawrence I Sinoway, Urs A Leuenberger

Abstract

Animal reports suggest that reflex activation of cardiac sympathetic nerves can evoke coronary vasoconstriction. Conversely, physiological stress may induce coronary vasodilation to meet an increased metabolic demand. Whether the sympathetic nervous system can modulate coronary vasomotor tone in response to stress in humans is unclear. Coronary blood velocity (CBV), an index of coronary blood flow, can be measured in humans by noninvasive duplex ultrasound. We studied 11 healthy volunteers and measured beat-by-beat changes in CBV, blood pressure, and heart rate during 1) static handgrip for 20 s at 10% and 70% of maximal voluntary contraction; 2) lower body negative pressure at -10 and -30 mmHg for 3 min each; 3) cold pressor test for 90 s; and 4) hypoxia (10% O(2)), hyperoxia (100% O(2)), and hypercapnia (5% CO(2)) for 5 min each. At the higher level of handgrip, mean blood pressure increased (P < 0.001), whereas CBV did not change [P = not significant (NS)]. In addition, during lower body negative pressure, CBV decreased (P < 0.02; and P < 0.01, for -10 and -30 mmHg, respectively), whereas blood pressure did not change (P = NS). The dissociation between the responses of CBV and blood pressure to handgrip and lower body negative pressure is consistent with coronary vasoconstriction. During hypoxia, CBV increased (P < 0.02) and decreased during hyperoxia (P < 0.01), although blood pressure did not change (P = NS), suggesting coronary vasodilation during hypoxia and vasoconstriction during hyperoxia. In contrast, concordant increases in CBV and blood pressure were noted during the cold pressor test, and hypercapnia had no effects on either parameter. Thus the physiological stress known to be associated with sympathetic activation can produce coronary vasoconstriction in humans. Contrasting responses were noted during systemic hypoxia and hyperoxia where mechanisms independent of autonomic influences appear to dominate the vascular end-organ effects.

Figures

Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.
Graphs show individual and mean responses of coronary blood velocity (CBV) and the pressure-rate product [systolic blood pressure × heart rate (mmHg × beats/min), an index of myocardial O2 consumption] to handgrip exercise (70% of maximal contraction; A), lower body negative pressure (LBNP, −30 mmHg; B), the cold pressor test (CPT; C), systemic hypoxia (D), and hyperoxia (E). Bold arrows represent mean data and open arrows represent data from the heart transplant recipients (handgrip and hyperoxia only). Note: a decrease in CBV that accompanies an increase in pressure-rate product suggests coronary vasoconstriction.

Source: PubMed

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