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  • Title: Sympathetic nervous system activity and cardiovascular homeostatis during head-up tilt in patients with spinal cord injuries.
    Author: Houtman S, Oeseburg B, Hughson RL, Hopman MT.
    Journal: Clin Auton Res; 2000 Aug; 10(4):207-12. PubMed ID: 11029019.
    Abstract:
    The relationship between sympathetic nervous system activity and cardiovascular responses to head-up tilt in patients with spinal cord injuries and in able-bodied subjects was studied. Twenty-seven adults, nine in each of the three groups (tetraplegia, paraplegia, and able-bodied subjects) were tilted 70 degrees, head up, for 12 minutes after 20 minutes supine rest. Differences between steady-state measurements of mean arterial pressure, stroke volume, and sympathetic nervous system activity were estimated in both positions. Sympathetic nervous system activity was reflected by the low-frequency peak of the blood pressure variability spectrum. From supine rest to head-up tilt, low-frequency power increased in able-bodied subjects (median, 0.42 mm Hg2, p = 0.003), which was different (p = 0.015) from patients with tetraplegia and paraplegia (-0.15 and -0.10 mm Hg2, respectively). Stroke volume and mean arterial pressure decreased in patients with tetraplegia (-40% and -9 mm Hg, respectively; p = 0.008, both variables) more than in able-bodied subjects (-33%, 11 mm Hg, respectively) or patients with paraplegia (-24%, 8 mm Hg, respectively). Results indicated increased sympathetic nervous system activity during head-up tilt in able-bodied subjects, but not in patients with paraplegia or tetraplegia, whereas patients with tetraplegia, but not paraplegia, showed poorer cardiovascular homeostasis than able-bodied subjects. This suggests that patients with paraplegia maintained cardiovascular homeostasis during head-up tilt without increased sympathetic nervous system activity.
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