Arterial pressure profile in patients with cirrhosis: Fourier analysis of arterial pulse in relation to pressure level, stroke volume, and severity of disease: On the reduction of afterload in the hyperdynamic syndrome

2012 ◽  
Vol 47 (5) ◽  
pp. 580-590 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jens H. Henriksen ◽  
Stefan Fuglsang ◽  
Flemming Bendtsen
2019 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 42-48
Author(s):  
I. A. Grebenkina ◽  
◽  
A. A. Popova ◽  
S. D. Mayanskaya ◽  
S. V. Tretyakov ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 104 (5) ◽  
pp. 1402-1409 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathy L. Ryan ◽  
William H. Cooke ◽  
Caroline A. Rickards ◽  
Keith G. Lurie ◽  
Victor A. Convertino

Inspiratory resistance induced by breathing through an impedance threshold device (ITD) reduces intrathoracic pressure and increases stroke volume (SV) in supine normovolemic humans. We hypothesized that breathing through an ITD would also be associated with a protection of SV and a subsequent increase in the tolerance to progressive central hypovolemia. Eight volunteers (5 men, 3 women) were instrumented to record ECG and beat-by-beat arterial pressure and SV (Finometer). Tolerance to progressive lower body negative pressure (LBNP) was assessed while subjects breathed against either 0 (sham ITD) or −7 cmH2O inspiratory resistance (active ITD); experiments were performed on separate days. Because the active ITD increased LBNP tolerance time from 2,014 ± 106 to 2,259 ± 138 s ( P = 0.006), data were analyzed (time and frequency domains) under both conditions at the time at which cardiovascular collapse occurred during the sham experiment to determine the mechanisms underlying this protective effect. At this time point, arterial blood pressure, SV, and cardiac output were higher ( P ≤ 0.005) when breathing on the active ITD rather than the sham ITD, whereas indirect indicators of autonomic activity (low- and high-frequency oscillations of the R-to-R interval) were not altered. ITD breathing did not alter the transfer function between systolic arterial pressure and R-to-R interval, indicating that integrated baroreflex sensitivity was similar between the two conditions. These data show that breathing against inspiratory resistance increases tolerance to progressive central hypovolemia by better maintaining SV, cardiac output, and arterial blood pressures via primarily mechanical rather than neural mechanisms.


1965 ◽  
Vol 209 (2) ◽  
pp. 264-268 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael D. Day ◽  
James W. McCubbin ◽  
Irvine H. Page

Though single injections of angiotensin cause extreme rise in arterial pressure, infusion fails to elevate pressure to the degree usually found in experimental renal hypertension. The maximal pressure level obtainable by infusing angiotensin into anesthetized dogs was approximately the same in different dogs and was independent of the initial pressure. The vagus nerves did not importantly influence the "ceiling" response but if arterial pressure was then elevated by carotid occlusion the ceiling was raised. The combination of renal artery constriction and infusion of angiotensin failed to give a higher ceiling than angiotensin alone. In dogs with chronic renal hypertension the ceiling was higher than in normal dogs, presumably because of an upward shift in the range of response of cardiovascular reflexes. The results support the view that compensatory cardiovascular reflexes and tachyphylaxis to large amounts of infused angiotensin suppress the response and that these factors are much less effective in limiting response to quick injection.


1996 ◽  
Vol 271 (2) ◽  
pp. H812-H822 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. C. Rose ◽  
J. S. Schwaber

Vagal control of the heart is the most rapidly responding limb of the arterial baroreflex. We created a mathematical model of the left heart and vascular system to evaluate the ability of heart rate to influence blood pressure. The results show that arterial pressure depends nonlinearly on rate and that changes in rate are of limited effectiveness, particularly when rate is increased above the basal level. A 10% change in heart rate from rest causes a change of only 2.4% in arterial pressure due to the reciprocal relation between heart rate and stroke volume; at higher rates, insufficient filling time causes stroke volume to fall. These findings agree well with published experimental data and challenge the idea that changes in heart rate alone can strongly and rapidly affect arterial pressure. Possible implications are that vagally mediated alterations in inotropic and dromotropic state, which are not included in this model, play important roles in the fast reflex control of blood pressure or that the vagal limb of the baroreflex is of rather limited effectiveness.


1964 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 457-464 ◽  
Author(s):  
Burton S. Tabakin ◽  
John S. Hanson ◽  
Thornton W. Merriam ◽  
Edgar J. Caldwell

The physiologic variables defining the circulatory and respiratory state in normal man have been measured in recumbency, standing at rest and during progressively severe grades of exercise approaching near-maximal levels. Indicator-dilution technique was used for determination of cardiac output with simultaneous radio-electrocardiographic recordings of heart rate. Direct intra-arterial pressure measurements were utilized for calculation of peripheral vascular resistance. Minute volume of ventilation, oxygen utilization, and carbon dioxide elimination were obtained from analysis of expired air collected at the time of each cardiac output determination. A peak mean workload of 1,501 kg-m/min was realized during the treadmill exercise. Increases in cardiac output over the range of exercise employed correlated well with indices of workload such as heart rate, oxygen utilization, and minute volume of ventilation. There was no correlation of stroke volume with these indices. It is concluded from examination of individual stroke-volume responses that a progressive increase in stroke volume is not a necessary or constant phenomenon in adapting to increasing workload. cardiac output in treadmill exercise; dye-dilution cardiac output determinations; arterial pressure during upright exercise; stroke-volume response to graded treadmill exercise; exercise response of cardiac output and stroke volume; peripheral vascular resistance response to position and exercise; treadmill exercise—effects on cardiac output, stroke volume, and oxygen uptake; minute ventilation, cardiac output, and stroke volume during exercise; carbon dioxide elimination during treadmill exercise; heart rate and cardiac output during treadmill exercise; exercise; physiology Submitted on July 12, 1963


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ramin Bighamian ◽  
Jin-Oh Hahn

Arterial pulse pressure has been widely used as surrogate of stroke volume, for example, in the guidance of fluid therapy. However, recent experimental investigations suggest that arterial pulse pressure is not linearly proportional to stroke volume. However, mechanisms underlying the relation between the two have not been clearly understood. The goal of this study was to elucidate how arterial pulse pressure and stroke volume respond to a perturbation in the left ventricular blood volume based on a systematic mathematical analysis. Both our mathematical analysis and experimental data showed that the relative change in arterial pulse pressure due to a left ventricular blood volume perturbation was consistently smaller than the corresponding relative change in stroke volume, due to the nonlinear left ventricular pressure-volume relation during diastole that reduces the sensitivity of arterial pulse pressure to perturbations in the left ventricular blood volume. Therefore, arterial pulse pressure must be used with care when used as surrogate of stroke volume in guiding fluid therapy.


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