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Effect of Carotid Sinus Stimulation on Cardiac Output and Peripheral Vascular Resistance during Changes in Blood Volume Distribution in Man

45

Citations

13

References

1977

Year

Abstract

Abstract In ten healthy subjects (mean age 29.6 years) the hemodynamic response to carotid sinus stimulation (neck suction ‐ 40 mmHg) was studied under control conditions and during peripheral pooling of blood (lower body negative pressure). Heart rate, arterial and central venous pressure, cardiac output and forearm blood flow were measured. The time sequence of the heart rate response was studied separately in six healthy subjects. During control conditions, carotid sinus stimulation induced a significant decrease in arterial pressure and heart rate. The blood pressure decrease mainly reflected a reduction in cardiac output, total peripheral vascular resistance being essentially unchanged. However, in the skeletal muscle, represented by a forearm segment, vascular resistance decreased significantly. During lower body negative pressure (LBNP) the same stimulation of the carotid sinus induced a significantly greater fall in mean arterial pressure even though the reduction in cardiac output was slightly smaller on the average than in the control condition. The heart rate increased, probably secondary to a time dependent increase in heart rate elicited by the continuous LBNP stimulus. Total peripheral vascular resistance decreased significantly during LBNP, the reaction likewise differing significantly from that in the control condition. Thus the augmented blood pressure response was due to a more pronounced vasodilatation when the carotid sinus was stimulated during lower body negative pressure. The results indicate that the hemodynamic changes elicited by carotid sinus stimulation are modified by changes in the distribution of blood volume and in the tone of resistance vessels.

References

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