sympathetic outflow
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2021 ◽  
Vol 54 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Karla G. Schwarz ◽  
Katherin V. Pereyra ◽  
Camilo Toledo ◽  
David C. Andrade ◽  
Hugo S. Díaz ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Chronic heart failure (CHF) is a global health problem. Increased sympathetic outflow, cardiac arrhythmogenesis and irregular breathing patterns have all been associated with poor outcomes in CHF. Several studies showed that activation of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS) play a key role in CHF pathophysiology. Interestingly, potassium (K+) supplemented diets showed promising results in normalizing RAS axis and autonomic dysfunction in vascular diseases, lowering cardiovascular risk. Whether subtle increases in dietary K+ consumption may exert similar effects in CHF has not been previously tested. Accordingly, we aimed to evaluate the effects of dietary K+ supplementation on cardiorespiratory alterations in rats with CHF. Methods Adult male Sprague–Dawley rats underwent volume overload to induce non-ischemic CHF. Animals were randomly allocated to normal chow diet (CHF group) or supplemented K+ diet (CHF+K+ group) for 6 weeks. Cardiac arrhythmogenesis, sympathetic outflow, baroreflex sensitivity, breathing disorders, chemoreflex function, respiratory–cardiovascular coupling and cardiac function were evaluated. Results Compared to normal chow diet, K+ supplemented diet in CHF significantly reduced arrhythmia incidence (67.8 ± 15.1 vs. 31.0 ± 3.7 events/hour, CHF vs. CHF+K+), decreased cardiac sympathetic tone (ΔHR to propranolol: − 97.4 ± 9.4 vs. − 60.8 ± 8.3 bpm, CHF vs. CHF+K+), restored baroreflex function and attenuated irregular breathing patterns. Additionally, supplementation of the diet with K+ restores normal central respiratory chemoreflex drive and abrogates pathological cardio-respiratory coupling in CHF rats being the outcome an improved cardiac function. Conclusion Our findings support that dietary K+ supplementation in non-ischemic CHF alleviate cardiorespiratory dysfunction.


2021 ◽  
Vol 321 (4) ◽  
pp. H798-H806
Author(s):  
Massimo Nardone ◽  
Carlin Katerberg ◽  
Anthony V. Incognito ◽  
André L. Teixeira ◽  
Lauro C. Vianna ◽  
...  

The current signal-averaging technique for calculating sympathetic transduction of blood pressure does not consider the arterial pressure at which each muscle sympathetic burst occurs. A burst firing when mean arterial pressure is above the operating pressure was associated with a decrease in blood pressure. Thus, individuals with higher muscle sympathetic nerve activity demonstrate a reduced sympathetic transduction owing to the weighted contribution of more sympathetic bursts at higher levels of arterial pressure.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (8) ◽  
pp. 1005
Author(s):  
Georgina Cano ◽  
Shelby L. Hernan ◽  
Alan F. Sved

The centrally projecting Edinger-Westphal nucleus (EWcp) is a midbrain neuronal group, adjacent but segregated from the preganglionic Edinger-Westphal nucleus that projects to the ciliary ganglion. The EWcp plays a crucial role in stress responses and in maintaining energy homeostasis under conditions that require an adjustment of energy expenditure, by virtue of modulating heart rate and blood pressure, thermogenesis, food intake, and fat and glucose metabolism. This modulation is ultimately mediated by changes in the sympathetic outflow to several effector organs, including the adrenal gland, heart, kidneys, brown and white adipose tissues and pancreas, in response to environmental conditions and the animal’s energy state, providing for appropriate energy utilization. Classic neuroanatomical studies have shown that the EWcp receives inputs from forebrain regions involved in these functions and projects to presympathetic neuronal populations in the brainstem. Transneuronal tracing with pseudorabies virus has demonstrated that the EWcp is connected polysynaptically with central circuits that provide sympathetic innervation to all these effector organs that are critical for stress responses and energy homeostasis. We propose that EWcp integrates multimodal signals (stress, thermal, metabolic, endocrine, etc.) and modulates the sympathetic output simultaneously to multiple effector organs to maintain energy homeostasis under different conditions that require adjustments of energy demands.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. A541-A541
Author(s):  
Ekaterina Filatov ◽  
Alex P Rudecki ◽  
Alina-Geta Constantin ◽  
Sarah Louise Gray

Abstract Adaptive thermogenesis in brown adipose tissue is stimulated by the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) in response to cold stress. Using retrograde viral transneuronal tract tracers, previous studies have identified that the paraventricular nucleus (PVN), ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH), and median preoptic nucleus (MnPO) contain neurons that are part of sympathetic outflow tracts to brown adipose tissue, presumptively involved in SNS stimulation of interscapular brown adipose tissue (iBAT). Pituitary Adenylate Cyclase-Activating Polypeptide (PACAP) is a peptide hormone known to regulate energy homeostasis, acting in both the central (CNS) and peripheral nervous system (PNS). Mice lacking PACAP have impaired adrenergic-induced thermogenesis and a cold-sensitive phenotype. In the CNS, PACAP is highly expressed in the VMH, MnPO, and PVN of the hypothalamus. Injection of PACAP into the VMN increased core body temperature and sympathetic nerve activity to brown adipose tissue. While these studies show exogenous PACAP can activate sympathetic outflow tracts to brown adipose tissue, they do not confirm that endogenously expressed PACAP induces sympathetic nerve activity as an adaptive mechanism to cold stress, or if sympathetic outflow tracts originating in the hypothalamus express PACAP. We hypothesize that PACAP is expressed in neurons of sympathetic outflow tracts originating in the hypothalamus. To test this hypothesis, PACAP-eGFP transgenic mice were injected with the retrograde neural tracer, pseudorabies virus tagged with β-galactosidase (β-gal, PRV-BaBlu), in iBAT where postganglionic nerves innervate the tissue. Five-days post-infection, animals were culled, brains removed and cryosectioned. Neurons positive for green fluorescent protein (eGFP) and/or β-gal immunoreactivity (ir) were identified by immunohistochemistry in serial coronal and sagittal brain cryo-sections. Co-occurrence of eGFP-ir and β-gal-ir, inferred PACAP expressing neurons present in sympathetic outflow tracts (ImageJ). Co-occurrence was identified in several structures in the hypothalamus and thalamus. In conclusion, this study presents neuroanatomical evidence for populations of PACAPinergic neurons in the hypothalamus that are part of sympathetic outflow tracts to brown adipose tissue, providing further evidence of a central role for PACAP in regulating energy homeostasis.


Hypertension ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 77 (5) ◽  
pp. 1456-1468
Author(s):  
John S. Floras

Multiunit recordings of postganglionic sympathetic outflow to muscle yield otherwise imperceptible insights into sympathetic neural modulation of human vascular resistance and blood pressure. This Corcoran Lecture will illustrate the utility of microneurography to investigate neurogenic cardiovascular regulation; review data concerning muscle sympathetic nerve activity of women and men with normal and high blood pressure; explore 2 concepts, central upregulation of muscle sympathetic outflow and cortical autonomic neuroplasticity; present sleep apnea as an imperfect model of neurogenic hypertension; and expose the paradox of sympathetic excitation without hypertension. In awake healthy normotensive individuals, resting muscle sympathetic nerve activity increases with age, sleep fragmentation, and obstructive apnea. Its magnitude is not signaled by heart rate. Age-related changes are nonlinear and differ by sex. In men, sympathetic nerve activity increases with age but without relation to their blood pressure, whereas in women, both rise concordantly after age 40. Mean values for muscle sympathetic nerve activity burst incidence are consistently higher in cohorts with hypertension than in matched normotensives, yet women’s sympathetic nerve traffic can increase 3-fold between ages 30 and 70 without causing hypertension. Thus, increased sympathetic nerve activity may be necessary but is insufficient for primary hypertension. Moreover, its inhibition does not consistently decrease blood pressure. Despite a half-century of microneurographic research, large gaps remain in our understanding of the content of the sympathetic broadcast from brain to blood vessel and its specific individual consequences for circulatory regulation and cardiovascular, renal, and metabolic risk.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saul Huerta de la Cruz ◽  
Luisa Rocha ◽  
Cindy Santiago-Castañeda ◽  
Araceli Sanchez-Lopez ◽  
Alma D Pinedo-Rodriguez ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhao-Fu Sheng ◽  
Hua Zhang ◽  
PeiRu Zheng ◽  
Shanyan Chen ◽  
Zezong Gu ◽  
...  

Abstract Aims Elevated sympathetic outflow is associated with primary hypertension. However, the mechanisms involved in heightened sympathetic outflow in hypertension are unclear. The central amygdala (CeA) regulates autonomic components of emotions through projections to the brainstem. The neuronal Kv7 channel is a non-inactivating voltage-dependent K+ channel encoded by KCNQ2/3 genes involved in stabilizing the neuronal membrane potential and regulating neuronal excitability. In this study, we investigated if altered Kv7 channel activity in the CeA contributes to heightened sympathetic outflow in hypertension. Methods and results The mRNA and protein expression levels of Kv7.2/Kv7.3 in the CeA were significantly reduced in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs) compared with Wistar–Kyoto (WKY) rats. Lowering blood pressure with coeliac ganglionectomy in SHRs did not alter Kv7.2 and Kv7.3 channel expression levels in the CeA. Fluospheres were injected into the rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM) to retrogradely label CeA neurons projecting to the RVLM (CeA–RVLM neurons). Kv7 channel currents recorded from CeA–RVLM neurons in brain slices were much smaller in SHRs than in WKY rats. Furthermore, the basal firing activity of CeA–RVLM neurons was significantly greater in SHRs than in WKY rats. Bath application of specific Kv7 channel blocker 10, 10-bis (4-pyridinylmethyl)-9(10H)-anthracnose (XE-991) increased the excitability of CeA–RVLM neurons in WKY rats, but not in SHRs. Microinjection of XE-991 into the CeA increased arterial blood pressure (ABP) and renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA), while microinjection of Kv7 channel opener QO-58 decreased ABP and RSNA, in anaesthetized WKY rats but not SHRs. Conclusions Our findings suggest that diminished Kv7 channel activity in the CeA contributes to elevated sympathetic outflow in primary hypertension. This novel information provides new mechanistic insight into the pathogenesis of neurogenic hypertension.


Author(s):  
Benjamin E. Young ◽  
Jody L. Greaney ◽  
David M. Keller ◽  
Paul J. Fadel

Since their origin over one half-century ago, microneurographic recordings of sympathetic nerve activity have significantly advanced our understanding of the generation and regulation of central sympathetic outflow in human health and disease. For example, it is now appreciated that a myriad of disease states exhibit chronic sympathetic overactivity, a significant predictor of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. While microneurographic recordings allow for the direct quantification of sympathetic outflow, they alone do not provide information with respect to the ensuing sympathetically-mediated vasoconstriction and blood pressure (BP) response. Therefore, the study of vascular and/or BP responses to sympathetic outflow (i.e., sympathetic transduction) has now emerged as an area of growing interest within the field of neural cardiovascular control in human health and disease. To date, studies have primarily examined sympathetic transduction under two distinct paradigms: when reflexively evoking sympatho-excitation through the induction of a laboratory stressor (i.e., sympathetic transduction during stress) and/or following spontaneous bursts of sympathetic outflow occurring under resting conditions (i.e., sympathetic transduction at rest). The purpose of this brief review is to highlight how our physiological understanding of sympathetic transduction has been advanced by these studies, and to evaluate the primary analytical techniques developed to study sympathetic transduction in humans. We also discuss the framework by which the assessment of sympathetic transduction during stress reflects a fundamentally different process relative to sympathetic transduction at rest, and why findings from investigations using these different techniques should be interpreted as such and not necessarily be considered one and the same.


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