Acute sympathetic nervous system activation blunted flow-mediated dilation only during the cold pressor test (1.51%), demonstrating that blunted FMD is not a general response to increased SNA.
Does acute sympathetic nervous system activation reduce flow-mediated dilation of the brachial artery in healthy young men?
Acute sympathetic nervous system activation does not uniformly blunt flow-mediated dilation, as the vascular response varies depending on the specific method of sympathetic activation.
We tested the hypothesis that flow-mediated dilation (FMD) of the brachial artery would be impaired by acute increases in sympathetic nervous system activity (SNA) in models where similar peak shear stress stimulus was achieved by varying the duration of forearm muscle ischemia. Eleven healthy young men were studied under four different conditions, each with its own control: lower body suction (LBS), cold pressor test (CPT), mental arithmetic task (MAT), and activation of muscle chemoreflex (MCR). The duration of ischemia before observation of FMD by ultrasound imaging was 5 min each for control, LBS, and CPT; 3 min for MAT; and 2-min for MCR. Peak shear rate was not different between control and any of the SNA conditions, although total shear in the first minute was reduced in MAT. MCR was the only condition in which brachial artery vasoconstriction was observed before forearm occlusion 4.38 (SD 0.53) vs. control 4.60 (SD 0.53) mm, P < 0.05; however, diameter increased to the same absolute value as that of the control, so the percent FMD was greater for MCR 9.85 (SD 2.33) vs. control 5.29 (SD 1.50)%. Blunting of the FMD response occurred only in the CPT model 1.51 (SD 1.20)%. During SNA, the increase in plasma cortisol from baseline was significant only for MCR; the increase in plasma norepinephrine was significant for MCR, LBS, and CPT; and the increase in epinephrine was significant only for MCR. These results showed that the four models employed to achieve increases in SNA had different effects on baseline brachial artery diameter and that blunted FMD is not a general response to increased SNA.
Dyson et al. (Sat,) conducted a other in Healthy (n=11). Acute sympathetic nervous system activation (LBS, CPT, MAT, MCR) vs. Control conditions was evaluated on Flow-mediated dilation (FMD) of the brachial artery. Acute sympathetic nervous system activation blunted flow-mediated dilation only during the cold pressor test (1.51%), demonstrating that blunted FMD is not a general response to increased SNA.
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