The mammalian exercise pressor reflex in health and disease

被引:176
作者
Smith, SA
Mitchell, JH
Garry, MG
机构
[1] Univ Texas, SW Med Ctr, Harry S Moss Heart Ctr, Dept Internal Med, Dallas, TX 75390 USA
[2] Univ Texas, SW Med Ctr, Harry S Moss Heart Ctr, Dept Phys Therapy, Dallas, TX 75390 USA
[3] Univ Texas, SW Med Ctr, Harry S Moss Heart Ctr, Dept Physiol, Dallas, TX 75390 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1113/expphysiol.2005.032367
中图分类号
Q4 [生理学];
学科分类号
071003 ;
摘要
The exercise pressor reflex (a peripheral neural reflex originating in skeletal muscle) contributes significantly to the regulation of the cardiovascular system during exercise. Exercise-induced signals that comprise the afferent arm of the reflex are generated by activation of mechanically (muscle mechanoreflex) and chemically sensitive (muscle metaboreflex) skeletal muscle receptors. Activation of these receptors and their associated afferent fibres reflexively adjusts sympathetic and parasympathetic nerve activity during exercise. In heart failure, the cardiovascular response to exercise is augmented. Owing to the peripheral skeletal myopathy that develops in heart failure (e.g. muscle atrophy, decreased peripheral blood flow, fibre-type transformation and reduced oxidative capacity), the exercise pressor reflex has been implicated as a possible mechanism by which the cardiovascular response to physical activity is exaggerated in this disease. Accumulating evidence supports this conclusion. This review therefore focuses on the role of the exercise pressor reflex in regulating the cardiovascular system during exercise in both health and disease. Updates on our current understanding of the exercise pressor reflex neural pathway as well as experimental models used to study this reflex are presented. In addition, special emphasis is placed on the changes in exercise pressor reflex activity that develop in heart failure, including the contributions of the muscle mechanoreflex and metaboreflex to this pressor reflex dysfunction.
引用
收藏
页码:89 / 102
页数:14
相关论文
共 85 条
[31]   EFFECTS OF CAPSAICIN AND BRADYKININ ON AFFERENT-FIBERS WITH ENDINGS IN SKELETAL-MUSCLE [J].
KAUFMAN, MP ;
IWAMOTO, GA ;
LONGHURST, JC ;
MITCHELL, JH .
CIRCULATION RESEARCH, 1982, 50 (01) :133-139
[32]   EFFECTS OF STATIC MUSCULAR-CONTRACTION ON IMPULSE ACTIVITY OF GROUP-III AND GROUP-IV AFFERENTS IN CATS [J].
KAUFMAN, MP ;
LONGHURST, JC ;
RYBICKI, KJ ;
WALLACH, JH ;
MITCHELL, JH .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 1983, 55 (01) :105-112
[33]  
Kaufman MP., 1996, HDB PHYSL, P381, DOI 10.1002/CPHY.CP120110
[34]   Experimental animal models of muscle pain and analgesia [J].
Kehl, LJ ;
Fairbanks, CA .
EXERCISE AND SPORT SCIENCES REVIEWS, 2003, 31 (04) :188-194
[35]   Heart failure alters the strength and mechanisms of arterial baroreflex pressor responses during dynamic exercise [J].
Kim, JK ;
Augustyniak, RA ;
Sala-Mercado, JA ;
Hammond, RL ;
Ansorge, EJ ;
Rossi, NF ;
O'Leary, DS .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-HEART AND CIRCULATORY PHYSIOLOGY, 2004, 287 (04) :H1682-H1688
[36]   VR-1 receptor blockade attenuates the pressor response to capsaicin but has no effect on the pressor response to contraction in cats [J].
Kindig, AE ;
Heller, TB ;
Kaufman, MP .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-HEART AND CIRCULATORY PHYSIOLOGY, 2005, 288 (04) :H1867-H1873
[37]   ASCENDING PATHWAYS MEDIATING SOMATOAUTONOMIC REFLEXES IN EXERCISING DOGS [J].
KOZELKA, JW ;
CHRISTY, GW ;
WURSTER, RD .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 1987, 62 (03) :1186-1191
[38]   Reflex cardiovascular responses originating in exercising muscles of mice [J].
Kramer, JM ;
Aragones, A ;
Waldrop, TG .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 2001, 90 (02) :579-585
[39]   Reflex cardiovascular responses evoked by selective activation of skeletal muscle ergoreceptors [J].
Leshnower, BG ;
Potts, JT ;
Garry, MG ;
Mitchell, JH .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 2001, 90 (01) :308-316
[40]   COEXPRESSION OF P2X(2) AND P2X(3) RECEPTOR SUBUNITS CAN ACCOUNT FOR ATP-GATED CURRENTS IN SENSORY NEURONS [J].
LEWIS, C ;
NEIDHART, S ;
HOLY, C ;
NORTH, RA ;
BUELL, G ;
SURPRENANT, A .
NATURE, 1995, 377 (6548) :432-435