Physiology of the vasovagal reflex
Transcription
Physiology of the vasovagal reflex
W Wieling AMC Amsterdam Physiology of the Vasovagal Reflex Sept 2011- sept 2014 About 500 patients VASOVAGAL SYNCOPE • parasympathetic (vagal) outflow increases slowing the heart • simultaneously, the activity of efferent sympathetic vasoconstrictor nerves decreases, leading to systemic vasodilatation 5 sec MSFP about 20 mm Hg ISSUE 3 STUDY BrignoleM, Donateo et al. Circulation. Arrhythmia and Electrophysiology2014;7:10-16. STANDING Central blood volume (CBV) Cardiac filling Stroke volume Cardiac output CBV CBV Vasomotor tone Opposes fall in blood pressure Skeletal muscle tone Opposes venous pooling CBV CBV CENTRAL BLOOD VOLUME • Amount of blood available for the heart to pump • Stabilizer of the Circulation • A heart cannot pump blood that it does not receive Wieling W, de Lange FJ, Jardine DL. Frontiers in Physiology 2014; epub eahead of print - intermittent heart block. - CBV normal - Pacing: Effective - Orthostatic vasovagal faint. - CBV - Pacing: Ineffective CBV CBV HISTORICAL BACKGROUND • Clinical observations. Cotton & Lewis 1918. • Around midcentury: intra-arterial BP, CO, FBF measurements • Around 1990 Finapres 1990ties Penaz & Wesseling: Finger arterial pressure Finometer Nexfin PULSE WAVE ANALYSIS Academic Medical Centre around 1995 Rapid recovery FAINTING MECHANISMS • Large decrease in CO (50%) typically occurs in presyncope • No pronounced vasodilatation in presyncope. TPR on average about 40% above supine control • Huge variety in individual responses v 18seconds Weissler et al Vasodepressor syncope. Factors influencing cardiac output. Circulation 1957; 25:875-82. Inflation of antigravity suite Transit time TRANSIT TIME • about 5 heart beats • Probably >> 5 heart beats if central blood volume is depleted 31-years 69-years Verheyden et al. Impact of age on the vasovagal response provoked by sublingual nitroglycerine in routine tilt testing. Clin Sci 2007;113:329-337 old: 51 years young: 30 years Verheyden et al. Impact of age on the vasovagal response provoked by sublingual nitroglycerine in routine tilt testing. Clin Sci 2007;113:329-337 Wieling et al. Reflex control of heart rate in normal subjects relation to age: A Data Base for Cardiac Vagal Neuropathy. Diabetologia 1982;22:163-166. “ISSUES” TO BE ADDRESSED • conventional wisdom is that the decrease in vagal tone with aging is due to impaired efferent vagal pathways • incompatible with the observations in the ISSUE studies VAGAL NERVE FUNCTION IN SENIORS • efferent impairment of the vagal nerve • subnormal resting levels of vagalcardiac nuclei by baroreceptor input • abnormal, but reversible central “setting” of the activity of vagalcardiac motor nuclei TILTBACK 30 s PPFH • decreased cardiac contractility resulting from increased vagal and decreased sympathetic outflow • sustained central suppression of central excitatory mechanisms. TAKE HOME MESSAGE • a heart cannot pump blood that it does not receive • increased vagal outflow decreases cardiac contractility Wieling W, de Lange FJ, Jardine DL. A heart cannot pump blood that it does not receive. Frontiers in Physiology 2014; epub eahead of print Coote JH. Myths and realities of the cardiac vagus. J Physiol 2013;591:4073-4085 Sir Thomas Lewis 1881-1945 • Heart block 1908 • Vasovagal syncope and the carotid sinus mechanism with comments on Gowers's and Nothnagel's syndrome. Br Med J 1932 • personally disliked the term cardiologist and preferred to be considered a cardiovascular disease specialist