Experimental physiology
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Experimental physiology · May 2001
Comparative StudyCardiovascular response to graded lower body negative pressure in young and elderly man.
Lower body negative pressure (LBNP) reduces central venous pressure (CVP) and cardiac output. The elderly are reported to have a limited capacity to increase cardiac output by increasing heart rate (HR), are especially dependent on end diastolic volume to maintain stroke volume and therefore should be especially vulnerable to LBNP. The present study compared the effects of LBNP in the young and old. ⋯ Both groups produced similar significant increases in vascular resistance, HR, plasma vasopressin (AVP) and noradrenaline. Mean arterial blood pressure (MBP) and plasma adrenaline did not change significantly. Therefore healthy old men respond to LBNP in a similar manner to the young, although MBP and SD are regulated around different baselines in the two groups.
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Experimental physiology · May 2001
Reflex nature of the cardiorespiratory response to primary thoracic blast injury in the anaesthetised rat.
Blast injuries represent a problem for civilian and military populations. Primary thoracic blast injury causes a triad of bradycardia, hypotension and apnoea. The objective of this study was to investigate the reflex nature of this response and its modulation by vagotomy or administration of atropine. ⋯ V.) caused a significant reduction in the bradycardia (HP increasing from 124 +/- 3 ms to 142 +/- 4 ms) but did not modulate either the hypotension or apnoea. It is concluded that a reflex involving the vagus nerve mediates the bradycardia, apnoea and a component of the hypotension associated with thoracic blast. The pattern of this response is similar to effects that follow stimulation of the pulmonary afferent C-fibres.