Arterial baroreceptor and cardiopulmonary reflex control of sympathetic outflow in human heart failure

Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2001 Jun:940:500-13. doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2001.tb03701.x.

Abstract

Several observations indicate that the arterial baroreflex control of sympathetic nerve activity is preserved, even in advanced heart failure. These include: (1) augmentation of muscle sympathetic nerve activity burst amplitude and duration following a premature beat; (2) rapid recognition of changes in blood pressure induced by ventricular arrhythmias; (3) muscle sympathetic alternans and a steep inverse relationship between changes in diastolic pressure and the subsequent sympathetic burst amplitude during pulsus alternans; (4) similar inhibition of muscle sympathetic nerve activity in subjects with normal and impaired left ventricular systolic function by increases in intrathoracic aortic transmural pressure; (5) documentation, by cross-spectral analysis, of similar gain in the transfer function between blood pressure and muscle sympathetic nerve activity in these two groups; and (6) during sodium nitroprusside infusion, similar reflex increases in total body norepinephrine spillover in normal and heart-failure subjects. When nonhypotensive lower-body negative pressure was applied to test the hypothesis that selective reduction of atrial and pulmonary pressures would exert a cardiac sympathoinhibitory response in heart failure, there was no effect in control subjects, but cardiac norepinephrine spillover fell by 25% (P < .05) in those with systolic dysfunction. In summary, human heart failure is characterized by a rapidly responsive and sensitive arterial baroreflex, and by activation of a cardiac sympathoexcitatory reflex related to increased cardiopulmonary filling pressures.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Arteries / innervation*
  • Baroreflex / physiology*
  • Cardiac Output, Low / physiopathology*
  • Heart / physiopathology*
  • Humans
  • Lung / physiopathology*
  • Sympathetic Nervous System / physiopathology*