• Arch Phys Med Rehabil · Aug 2006

    Cardiovascular responses and postexercise hypotension after arm cycling exercise in subjects with spinal cord injury.

    • Victoria E Claydon, Adrienne T Hol, Janice J Eng, and Andrei V Krassioukov.
    • International Collaboration On Repair Discoveries, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
    • Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2006 Aug 1;87(8):1106-14.

    ObjectiveTo examine postexercise hypotension and contributing factors in subjects with spinal cord injury (SCI).DesignProspective clinical research study.SettingRehabilitation center.ParticipantsSubjects with chronic cervical-level (n=19) and thoracic-level (n=8) SCI.InterventionsNot applicable.Main Outcome MeasuresSubjects underwent graded arm-cycling with electrocardiogram and oxygen uptake monitoring to exhaustion. Heart rates and blood pressures were measured before and after exercising. Injury to motor and sensory pathways was determined by American Spinal Injury Association grade, and to autonomic pathways by sympathetic skin responses (SSRs) (n=16).ResultsResting blood pressures and heart rates were lower in cervical than thoracic SCI (mean arterial pressure [MAP]: cervical, 76.6+/-2 mmHg; thoracic, 93.5+/-3 mmHg; P<.001). Following exercise, heart rate responses were greater in thoracic than cervical SCI; MAP increased in thoracic SCI (8.4+/-5 mmHg) and markedly decreased in cervical SCI (-9.3+/-2 mmHg) (P<.001). No subject had significant electrocardiographic abnormalities at rest or during exercise. There were correlations between SSR and heart rate and blood pressure responses to exercise; the correlation between the SSR and blood pressure response was due to an interaction between the heart rate and blood pressure responses.ConclusionsAbnormal cardiovascular responses to exercise and transient postexercise hypotension were common in cervical, but not thoracic SCI. This may be partly related to loss of descending sympathetic nervous control of the heart and vasculature following high SCI.

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