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Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 277: R1444-R1452, 1999;
0363-6119/99 $5.00
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Vol. 277, Issue 5, R1444-R1452, November 1999

Effects of a three-day head-down tilt on renal and hormonal responses to acute volume expansion

Pierre Mauran1, Saïd Sediame2, Anne Pavy-Le Traon3, Alain Maillet3, Alain Carayon2, Christiane Barthelemy2, Guillaume Weerts3, Antonio Guell4, and Serge Adnot2

1 Département de Physiologie de la Faculté de Médecine de Reims, American Memorial Hospital, F-51092, Reims; 2 Laboratoire d'Explorations Vasculaires et Métaboliques, Service de Physiologie et d'Explorations Fonctionnelles, Hôpital Henri Mondor et Institut National de la Sante et de la Recherche Medicale U-492, 94010 Creteil; 3 MEDES/Institut de Médecine et de Physiologie Spatiales, Clinique Spatiale, Centre Hospitalier et Universitaire Rangueil, 31403, Toulouse Cedex 4; and 4 Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales, 75-039 Paris, Cedex 01, France


    ABSTRACT
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

To clarify whether exposure to 6° head-down tilt (HDT) leads to alterations in body fluid volumes and responses to a saline load similar to those observed during space flight we investigated eight healthy subjects during a 4-day, 6° HDT and during a time-control ambulatory period with cross-over. Compared with the ambulatory period, HDT was associated with greater urinary excretion of water and sodium (UV, UNaV) from 0 to 12 h (cumulated UV 1,781 ± 154 vs. 1,383 ± 170 ml, P < 0.05; cumulated UNaV 156 ± 14 vs. 117 ± 9 mmol, P < 0.05), and with higher plasma atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) at 4 h. Hemoglobin and hematocrit increased over the first 24 h, and blood and plasma volumes were decreased after 48 h of HDT (P < 0.05). Plasma renin activity (PRA) and aldosterone did not differ between the two groups. With prolongation of HDT, UV and UNaV returned close to baseline values. On the fourth HDT day, a 30-min infusion of 20 ml/kg isotonic saline was performed, while a large oral water load maintained a high urine output. The ambulatory period experiment was done with the subjects in the acute supine posture. Sodium excreted within 4 h of loading was 123 ± 8 mmol during HDT vs. 168 ± 16 mmol during the ambulatory period (P < 0.05). The increase in plasma ANF and decrease in PRA were greater during HDT than during the ambulatory period (ANF 30 ± 5 vs. 13 ± 4 pg/ml, P < 0.05; PRA -1.4 ± 0.4 vs. -0.5 ± 0.2 ng · ml-1 · h-1, P < 0.05). Our data suggest that after a 3-day HDT period, thoracic volume receptor loading returns to the level seen in the upright position, leading to blunted responses to volume expansion, compared with acute supine control.

microgravity; body fluids; renal function; hydromineral balance; fluid-regulating hormones; central blood volume


    INTRODUCTION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

THE COMPLETE LOSS of hydrostatic forces (weightlessness or microgravity) that occurs during space flights results in cardiovascular deconditioning responsible for a decrease in orthostatic tolerance when the subject returns to normal gravitational stress. The mechanisms underlying this intolerance are not yet clearly understood. Current hypotheses ascribe a central role to hypovolemia, which has been the focus of several inflight studies and ground-based experiments simulating microgravity, for instance using head-down tilt (HDT).

In the well-hydrated human being on earth, blood volume and its distribution are appropriate for spending most of the time in the upright posture in a single-gravity environment. Weightlessness and simulated microgravity have been shown to be associated with a redistribution of body fluids to the thoracocephalic regions and with a loss in plasma volume (3, 12, 17, 22). HDT has been widely used to simulate the microgravity-induced redistribution of body fluids (10, 15, 16), and several studies have shown increases in urine flow rate (UV) and urinary sodium excretion rate (UNaV) during the early phase of HDT (13, 19). However, studies of the renal responses to an isotonic saline load performed in space (18) and similar studies conducted during prolonged HDT (6) have brought discrepant results that question whether HDT is a reliable means of simulating weightlessness.

Norsk et al. (18) compared the responses to a saline load performed during Space-Lab D2-mission (4-6 days after launch) to similar ground-based experiments performed in the acute supine and in the acute seated postures. The microgravity-adapted renal responses to infusion reflected a condition in between that of ground-based seated and supine postures: renal sodium and water excretory responses to saline infusion during flight were increased compared with those observed on earth in the seated posture but they were delayed and attenuated compared with those obtained during acute supine ground-based control experiments. Drummer et al. (6) studied the effects of a 6-day period of -6° HDT on the responses to an intravenous saline infusion of 22 ml/kg body weight. Saline loading was repeated before, during, and after HDT. The cumulated renal excretion of sodium during the 24 h after infusion were similar during HDT to the one observed in the acute supine posture before the beginning of HDT. These results are in contrast with those from Norsk et al. and might indicate that HDT is not a reliable means of simulating microgravity.

In an attempt to clarify whether the HDT model accurately reflects exposure to microgravity and to characterize the effects of HDT on water and sodium handling, we studied changes in renal water and sodium excretion, plasma volume, and fluid-regulating hormones in volunteers exposed to a 4-day HDT, as well as their responses to acute extracellular fluid volume expansion with saline on the fourth HDT day. For this purpose we used a time-controlled cross-over designed study, with a saline-loading protocol different from the one used in previous studies (6).


    METHODS
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

Subjects. Eight male volunteers entered the study after giving their written informed consent. The age range was 23-32 yr [27 ± 1.3 (SD) yr], the weight range was 60-80 kg [70.4 ± 2.6 (SD) kg], and the height range was 170-181 cm [174 ± 1.8 (SD) cm]. All volunteers were healthy, as indicated by normal comprehensive physical examination, electrocardiogram, stand test, blood cell count, hematocrit (Ht), hemoglobin (Hb), serum concentrations of creatinine and electrolytes, blood glucose, human immunodeficiency virus, and hepatitis B seronegative tests; all had negative medical and surgical history except for usual benign diseases; all declared to be nonsmokers and not to use drugs or medications nor to consume excessive amounts of coffea, tea, caffeinated beverages, alcohol, and food rich in salt (peanuts, shells, nuocman, etc); all had on D-1 negative blood tests for alcohol and negative urine tests for drugs.

Study design. Each volunteer participated in two experimental periods, one ambulatory period and one 4-day HDT period, separated by 2 wk and assigned in random order. Both experiments were conducted in MEDES laboratory facilities in Toulouse during the spring. Ambient temperature and humidity were not controlled; ambient temperature varied in the range between 20 and 24°C.

The ambulatory period lasted 5 days (D-1 and D1-D4), during which the volunteers were ambulatory inside the laboratory during the day, walking in the lobbies and the halls with occasional sitting with their feet on the floor. Volunteers were not allowed to lay down during the day, that is from 0730 to 2100, except for a period in the supine position during the blood volume experiment on D4.

The HDT period lasted 6 days: during the first day (D-1) volunteers were ambulatory as previously described. On the second morning after their arrival at the laboratory, volunteers were allowed to stand up and be ambulatory for 1 h, which they used for morning toilet and breakfast. Then the volunteers were placed in a recumbent, -6° HDT position, in which they remained for the next 4 days (D1-D4) under continuous video monitoring. On the morning of D5 they assumed the upward posture and were asked to spend 1 day more in the MEDES facilities to verify that they did not experience orthostatic intolerance.

The extracellular fluid volume expansion experiment was done on the fifth day of each period, that is on HDT D4.

Caloric intake was 2,500 kcal/day during the ambulatory period and 2,000 kcal/day during the 4-day HDT period. Water intake was 40 ml · kg-1 · day-1 during both periods. Sodium intake was carefully controlled from the arrival in the MEDES facilities at 1800 on D-2 and throughout the experiment. Volunteers were not allowed to eat or to drink anything other than the meals and beverage given and prepared by the MEDES staff. They were asked to ingest all food they were given to eat. The daily intake of water and sodium was kept constant throughout the study period. Sodium content of beverage and food was calculated from tables of nutritional values. Meals were prepared so that 6 g of sodium chloride were used each day. This normal sodium diet was supplemented with 4 g of sodium chloride (a capsule of 2 g of salt given twice daily). Thus the daily intake of sodium was kept constant and very close to 170 mmol. During the week preceding each period the diet was not controlled but volunteers were asked to abstain from eating food rich in salt (peanuts, shells, nuocman, etc.) and to supplement their usual sodium diet with a capsule of 2 g of salt orally twice daily.

Extracellular fluid volume expansion experiment protocols. Acute extracellular fluid volume expansion with saline was performed as previously described on the fourth day of each period (1). Each extracellular fluid volume expansion experiment consisted of a 60-min equilibration period, a 90-min baseline period (T-90 to T0) and a 4-h volume expansion period (T0-T240).

All experiments were conducted in the morning. Volunteers were awakened at 0730 and had 1 h for their morning toilet and for a light breakfast (250 ml milk, 10 g sugar, 60 g bread, 10 g butter, 10 g marmalade, 200 ml orange juice) before the beginning of the experiment, and then they were not allowed to eat throughout the experiment. The ambulatory volunteers were in the upright or the sitting positions from 0730 to 0830, at which time they were asked to lay down in the supine position for the beginning of the experiment. The posture of the HDT volunteers did not change. At 0830 the 60-min equilibration period started. A catheter was inserted into a superficial vein of both forearms, one for the infusions and the other for blood sampling. A 15 ml/kg water load was given orally for 30 min. Indicators infusion was then initiated. At the beginning of the 90-min baseline period (T-90), the volunteers emptied their bladder and drank 150 ml of water. From then on, at 30-min intervals throughout the experiment, urine was collected and subjects drank 150 ml of water. At the beginning of the 4-h volume expansion period (T0), acute volume expansion was obtained by infusing 20 ml/kg of isotonic saline over a 30-min period. Before infusion the isotonic saline was warmed to 37°C by means of a water bath.

During both the baseline and volume expansion periods, the following variables were measured: heart rate (HR) and blood pressure (BP) every 10 min, UV and UNaV every 30 min, effective renal plasma flow (ERPF) assessed based on p-aminohippurate (PAH) clearance, and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) assessed based on inulin clearance at times T0, T120, and T240, urine cGMP concentration every 30 min, and blood concentrations of atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) at T0, T90, and T240, aldosterone (Aldo) at T0, T60, and T240, and plasma renin activity (PRA) at T0, T60, and T240.

HR and BP measurements. HR and BP were measured twice daily and every 10 min during the extracellular fluid volume expansion experiments, using an automatic sphygmomanometric device (Critikon Dinamap SX/SXP).

Blood volume measurements. Blood volume was measured using the Evans blue method. The dye was obtained from the Pharmacie Centrale des Hôpitaux de Paris. Measurements were made on D-1 and D3 during the HDT period and on D3 during the ambulatory period. Except when placed in the HDT posture, volunteers were resting in the supine posture during the 15 min preceding the beginning of blood volume measurement. A catheter was inserted into a superficial vein of both forearms, one for the dye injection and the other one for blood sampling. A 9-ml blood sample was taken before dye injection. Evans blue was injected taking great care not to lose any drop. The catheter was then rinsed with 3 ml of isotonic saline. Blood samples (3 ml) were drawn at 10, 15, and 20 min after dye injection. The amount of dye injected was calculated from the difference between the syringe weights precisely measured before and after the injection. Blood samples were centrifuged at 3,500 g for 20 min. Plasma Evans blue concentrations were determined by spectrophotometry using the preinjection sample as a blank. Plasma Evans blue concentrations were plotted against time, and extrapolation of the curve at time 0 gave the virtual plasma Evans blue concentrations at time 0. The dye injected dose was then divided by the latter value to obtain the plasma volume value.

Renal measurements. UV and UNaV were measured daily during both periods. In addition, on the first and fourth days of each period, UV and UNaV were measured at 4-h intervals.

During the extracellular fluid volume expansion experiments, GFR and ERPF, both corrected for body surface area, were assessed based on inulin (CIn) and PAH (CPAH) clearances, respectively. Inulin (Inutest polyfructosant, Boehringer-Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany) and PAH (Laboratoires SERB, Paris, France) were administered as previously described (20). After a loading dose of 40 and 10 mg/kg, respectively, an intravenous infusion was started immediately so that after 60 min plasma levels remained stable throughout the study. Inulin and PAH were diluted in normal isotonic saline and infused at a constant rate of 2 ml/min. Urine collections were obtained by active voiding at 30-min intervals. Venous blood samples (4 ml) were drawn before starting the infusions and immediately before the urine collections at T0, T90, T150, and T240. Urine volume was measured in a graduated cylinder. Inulin and PAH concentrations were determined using standard spectrophotometric methods. Values were calculated using the following standard formulas
C<SUB>In</SUB>, ml ⋅ min<SUP>−1</SUP> ⋅ 1.73 m<SUP>−2</SUP>: C<SUB>In</SUB> = UV × U<SUB>In</SUB>/P<SUB>In</SUB>

C<SUB>PAH</SUB>, ml ⋅ min<SUP>−1</SUP> ⋅ 1.73 m<SUP>−2</SUP>: C<SUB>PAH</SUB> = UV × U<SUB>PAH</SUB>/P<SUB>PAH</SUB>

Filtration fraction, %: FF = C<SUB>In</SUB>/C<SUB>PAH</SUB>

Na<SUP>+</SUP> excretion, &mgr;mol/min: U<SUB>Na</SUB>V = U<SUB>Na</SUB> × UV
where U and P are urine and plasma concentrations, respectively.

For purposes of comparison, individual mean values for UV and UNaV were calculated from cumulated measures obtained at 30-min intervals during baseline periods and during volume expansion periods. The cumulative sodium excretion rate was calculated and expressed as the percentage of the sodium load.

Plasma hormone measurements. One blood sample for each hormone to be assayed was placed in a polypropylene tube. The tubes were chilled and centrifuged at 3,500 g at 4°C for 20 min. Plasma was stored at -80°C until the time of the assays.

Plasma hormone measurements (ANF, PRA, and Aldo) were done before HDT, that is, at 0730 in the supine position on D1, 4 h after the beginning of HDT on D1, 24 h (D2) and 48 h (D3) after the beginning of HDT and on the corresponding times of the ambulatory period. During the ambulatory period, blood samples were obtained with subjects in the supine position, before standing up in the morning and, for the second one obtained on D1, after 60 min spent in the supine position. During the extracellular fluid volume expansion experiments performed on D4, measurements were done at T0 (ANF, PRA, and Aldo), T60 (PRA, Aldo), T90 (ANF) and T240 (ANF, PRA, and Aldo).

Plasma levels of immunoreactive ANF were measured in 6-ml blood samples collected in chilled tubes containing 10 mg EDTA, 5 mg trypsin inhibitor, 17.4 mg phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, and 0.1 mg aprotinin. ANF was extracted from 1 to 2 ml of plasma using 0.5 or 1 ml Vycor glass (Corning Glassware) suspension (60 mg activated glass powder in 1 ml deionized water). The absorbed atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) was eluted using 2.5 ml acetone-water. The eluates were transferred to chilled siliconized glass tubes and evaporated to dryness in a vacuum centrifuge. The pellet was reconstituted in 0.5 ml buffer [potassium phosphate 0.1 M, pH 7.4, containing 0.05 M NaCl, 0.1% bovine serum albumin (RIA grade, Sigma), 0.1% Triton X-100, and 0.01% sodium azide (Sigma)]. Recovery rate for three different quantities of ANF added to plasma was 92.5 ± 2.2%. Data were not corrected for loss during extraction. The antiserum used (Peninsula Laboratories, RAS 8798, rabbit anti-alpha -atrial natriuretic polypeptide serum) was highly cross-reactive with human alpha -ANF (100%), rat ANF (100%), ANF-(8---33) (90%), rat atriopeptin III (100%), and rat atriopeptin II (27%). A 0.1-ml aliquot of diluted plasma was added to antiserum (0.1 ml), and the mixture was incubated at 4°C for 24 h. On the next day, approximately 7,000 counts/min 125I-ANP (Amersham) was added to each tube and incubated for a further 24 h. The radiolabel was separated by addition of 4 mg dextran (0.5 ml) and coated charcoal (0.8 g Norit SXX EXTRA-0.08 g dextran T70 in 100 ml buffer and 5% horse serum) followed by centrifugation at 2,500 g for 15 min. The assay IC50 was approximately 25 pg/tube.

PRA and plasma Aldo were measured using 4-ml blood samples. PRA was indirectly determined based on the generation of angiotensin I (angiotensin I RIA kit SB-REN-2, ORIS, Gif-sur-Yvette, France) and expressed as nanograms per milliliter per hour. Plasma Aldo was determined using a RIA kit (SB-ALDO-2, ORIS) and expressed as picograms per milliliter.

Urinary cGMP was measured using a commercial RIA kit (cGMP 125I-RIA Kit, Dupont NEX-133).

Other blood tests. Total Hb was measured by spectrophotometry, using an OSM3 hemoximeter (Radiometer, Copenhagen, Denmark). Ht was determined using a standard method.

Statistical analysis. Comparisons were done with two-way ANOVA for repeated measures followed by protected Fisher's post hoc tests. Differences with P <=  0.05 were considered significant.


    RESULTS
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

Changes recorded early in the HDT period. As indicated by the values of 24-h urinary outputs of sodium, the subjects were in sodium balance (Table 1).

                              
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Table 1.   Effects of 3-day HDT period on body weight, HR, MBP, and 24-h UNa

The first 12 h of HDT were associated with an increase in UV and UNaV, compared with baseline values and to values obtained during the control ambulatory period (Fig. 1). Cumulated values of UV and UNaV were significantly higher during the first 12 h of HDT than during the corresponding ambulatory period (cumulated UV 1,781 ± 154 vs. 1,383 ± 170 ml, P < 0.05; cumulated UNaV 156 ± 14 vs. 117 ± 9 mmol, P < 0.05). Only during the first 12 h did UV and UNaV differ between the HDT and control periods. As shown in Fig. 1, after 24 h of HDT, UV and UNaV returned to pre-HDT values and were similar to values recorded during the ambulatory period (Fig. 1).


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Fig. 1.   Time course of urine flow rate (UV) and urinary sodium excretion rate (UNaV) during first 48 h of 4-day head-down tilt (HDT) period and during corresponding part of time-control ambulatory period (Amb). * Significantly different from time 0. dagger  Significantly different from Amb.

Hb and Ht values increased gradually during the first 24 h after the beginning of HDT and remained constant thereafter (Fig. 2, Table 2). No changes were observed during the control ambulatory period. The early changes in Hb and Ht during HDT were followed by a decrease in blood volume and plasma volume at 48 h (Fig. 2, Table 2). A decrease in body weight was also found on the third and fourth days of HDT (Table 1).


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Fig. 2.   Time course of hematocrit (Ht) during first 48 h of 4-day HDT period and during corresponding part of time-control Amb. Plasma volume (PV) measured before HDT, 48 h into HDT, and 48 h into Amb. * Significantly different from time 0. dagger  Significantly different from Amb.


                              
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Table 2.   Changes recorded during first 48 h of 3-day HDT period

Changes in PRA and in plasma concentrations of ANF and Aldo are shown in Table 2. Four hours after the beginning of HDT, plasma ANF was significantly higher than during the ambulatory period. No significant differences between HDT and the ambulatory period values of PRA and Aldo were found during the first 48 h of the study.

No significant differences were found for HR and BP values (Table 1).

Effects of 3 days of HDT on responses to a saline load. Presaline load values of plasma ANF, PRA, and Aldo measured on the fourth day at T0, that is after water load and indicators infusion, differed between HDT and the ambulatory periods. During HDT, lower plasma ANF concentrations and significantly higher PRA and plasma Aldo concentrations were found compared with values in the supine control position. No differences were observed for presaline load renal variable values, although there was a tendency toward lower UNaV (P = 0.12) and ERPF values during the HDT period than during the ambulatory period (Table 3, Fig. 3).

                              
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Table 3.   Effects of 3-day HDT period on renal responses to acute extracellular fluid volume expansion achieved using 30-min infusion of 20 ml/kg isotonic saline



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Fig. 3.   Natriuretic response to saline load performed by means of 30-min infusion of 20 ml/kg isotonic saline (S), on fourth day of HDT and on corresponding day of time-control Amb. UNa, cumulative urinary excretion of sodium over 4 h after saline load. * Significantly different from time 0. dagger  Significantly different from Amb.

During both the ambulatory and HDT periods, extracellular fluid volume expansion with isotonic saline resulted in increases in UNaV, plasma ANF, and urinary cGMP, and in a decrease in PRA (Table 3, Fig. 4). However, the magnitude of the UV and UNaV increases differed substantially between the two conditions. The increases in UV and UNaV from baseline were smaller during HDT than during the ambulatory control period (Table 3). Comparing HDT and ambulatory period, the values of UNaV were similar during the first 2 h after initiation of saline infusion, but thereafter HDT values decreased and were significantly smaller 3 and 4 h after infusion (Table 3). During the first 4 h after initiation of the saline infusion, 123 ± 8.4 mmol of sodium (58.3 ± 4.5% of the sodium infused) were excreted during the HDT period vs. 168 ± 16.7 mmol (78.9 ± 7.8% of the sodium infused) during the ambulatory period (P < 0.05; Fig. 3). No significant changes were found in ERPF or GFR (Table 3). In both conditions, plasma ANF values measured 90 min after the beginning of the infusion were significantly increased versus the presaline load value and returned to the presaline load value within 4 h after the beginning of the infusion (Fig. 4). The plasma ANF increase was greater during HDT than during the ambulatory period (30 ± 5 vs. 13 ± 4 pg/ml). Similarly, the increase in urinary cGMP found 2 h after the infusion tended to be greater during HDT than during the ambulatory period (Table 3). PRA was decreased both 1 and 4 h after the beginning of the infusion. The magnitude of the PRA decrease was greater during HDT than during the ambulatory period (-1.4 ± 0.4 vs. -0.5 ± 0.2 ng · ml-1 · h-1). Plasma Aldo kinetics differed between the two periods: Aldo remained unchanged during the ambulatory experiment and decreased during the HDT experiment (Fig. 4).


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Fig. 4.   Time course of plasma atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) and aldosterone (Aldo) concentrations, and of plasma renin activity (PRA) during first 4 h after saline load given as 30-min infusion of 20 ml/kg isotonic saline, on fourth day of HDT and on corresponding day of time-control Amb. * Significantly different from time 0. dagger Significantly different from Amb.


    DISCUSSION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

The present study, performed using a cross-over design with a time-control group, allowed characterization of early renal and hormonal responses to HDT and responses to a saline load on the fourth day of HDT. Antiorthostatic HDT bed rest was rapidly followed by increases in urinary water and sodium excretion and by decreases in blood and plasma volumes, leading to a reduced natriuretic response to a saline load. Comparison with a control ambulatory period revealed that natriuresis occurred mainly within the first 24 h of HDT and was associated with higher ANF concentrations. On the fourth day of HDT, and after the water load needed to study renal excretory function, PRA and plasma Aldo levels were higher and plasma ANF was lower than during the ambulatory control period, and the natriuretic response to the saline load was blunted. We suggest that after 3 days of HDT, thoracic volume receptor loading returns to the level seen in the upright position, leading to increased activity of sodium-retaining neurohumoral mechanisms and to decreased renal responses to volume expansion, compared with ambulatory subjects investigated shortly after changing from the upright to the supine position.

HDT is used to minimize the gravitational stress exerted on the human body and thus to simulate exposure to weightlessness. Compared with results obtained in the supine position just before tilting, HDT has been shown to induce acute increases in central venous pressure, left ventricular end-diastolic diameter, stroke volume, and cardiac output, suggesting a redistribution of body fluid toward the thorax (8, 16, 17). One effect of increased central blood volume (7) is that sodium and water excretions increase as a result in part of a rise in plasma ANF and of activation of the low pressure central baroreceptor reflex (1, 9, 14, 24). It is now well known that loading of the cardiopulmonary receptors located in the left atrium and pulmonary circulation induces a decrease in renal sympathetic nerve activity responsible for renal vasodilatation (and consequently for an increase in renal blood flow), an increase in UNaV, and a reduction in renin release (4, 5, 21). An increase in urinary excretion of sodium and water in response to HDT has been documented in several previous studies (13, 23), which, however, did not include a cross-over design. The increases in UV and UNaV have been shown to be limited to the first day of HDT (13). With prolongation of HDT, gradual decreases in central venous pressure, left end-systolic diameter, and cardiac output occurred (8), together with a loss of plasma volume (11). Our data are consistent with this sequence of events, because we found early increases in UV and UNaV during the first 12 h of HDT followed by a return to pre-HDT values.

These changes were not associated with a significant increase in plasma ANF. It is likely that in response to HDT-induced blood shift plasma ANF concentrations peaked earlier than at the time we chose for blood sampling, i.e., 4 h after initiation of HDT. However, at this time, plasma ANF concentrations were significantly higher during HDT than during the ambulatory period, because of slight, although insignificant, opposite changes from baseline. For both periods, baseline values were obtained in the same conditions, that is in the supine posture, before initiation of HDT and before standing up during the control period. During the ambulatory period, changing from the supine position to the upright posture induced a trend toward decreased plasma ANF concentrations, whereas exposure to HDT induced a trend toward higher plasma ANF values. After 24 h of HDT, UV and UNaV values were similar to those measured during the control ambulatory period, suggesting that a new steady state was achieved. Plasma volume measured 48 h after starting HDT was lower than during the ambulatory control period. Because Ht and Hb concentrations were increased as early as 24 h into the HDT period, it is likely that hypovolemia developed within the first 24 h of HDT, at the same time as UV and UNaV increased.

If, as it is generally believed, the early increase in UNaV and the ensuing contraction in blood volume found a few days after HDT initiation reflects a normal adaptive process, this should ultimately result in normalization of central blood volume. If such were the case, a return of thoracic volume receptor loading to the level seen in control measurements would normalize PRA, plasma Aldo, plasma ANF, and renal hemodynamics, and responses to an acute sodium load would be similar after several days of HDT and during an ambulatory period. In contrast, 3 days after HDT initiation, and after the water load needed to study renal excretory function, we found that PRA and plasma Aldo were higher and plasma ANF lower than at the matching time point during the ambulatory period. Although ERPF, GFR, and filtration fraction were not significantly different between the HDT and ambulatory period conditions, there was a tendency for ERPF to be lower in the HDT than in the control supine position. In addition, we found that the natriuretic response to a saline load was less marked on the fourth day of HDT than during the ambulatory control period. This occurred although plasma ANF and urinary cGMP concentrations increased and PRA decreased to similar levels in the HDT and ambulatory conditions. However, cumulative sodium excretion 4 h after the sodium load was reduced by 26%. Similar results have previously been obtained by Norsk et al. (18) who compared responses to a saline load during a Space-Lab D2-mission (4-6 days after launch) and during ground-based experiments performed in the supine and sitting positions. They found that sodium and water excretory responses to a saline infusion were delayed and blunted during flight compared with those during supine ground-based control experiments. If one examines the relative differences in UNaV and cumulative UNa, the attenuation of the renal response to saline load, compared with acute supine control, seems to be of smaller magnitude during HDT than during spaceflight. UNaV was decreased by 40% (0.39 vs. 0.65 mmol/min) in the present study and by 68% (0.14 vs. 0.43 mmol/min) in the study from Norsk et al.; cumulative UNa was decreased by 26% (123 vs. 168 mmol) in the present study and 45% (59 vs. 108 mmol) in the study by Norsk et al. However, these differences are due to differences in baseline values. Actually, the absolute decreases in UNaV and in cumulated UNa found in space compared with supine ground-based control experiments were of similar magnitude to those in the present study (UNaV 0.29 vs. 0.26 mmol/min; cumulated UNa 49 vs. 45 mmol). However, the time course of UNaV following saline infusion was not the same in the two studies. In space the attenuation of the UNaV response to saline, compared with supine ground-based control experiments, was significant 1 h after the saline load (18). In the present study, the values of UNaV during HDT were significantly different from those found during the ambulatory period 3 and 4 h after the infusion. Drummer et al. (6) studied the effects of a 6-day period of -6° HDT on the responses to an intravenous saline infusion of 22 ml/kg body weight. Saline loading was repeated before, during, and after HDT. Urine flow and sodium excretion were acutely increased after all infusions, but no significant differences were found between the three sets of experiments. The cumulated renal excretion of sodium during the 24 h after infusion were similar during HDT to the one observed in the acute supine posture before the beginning of HDT. These results are in contrast with those from Norsk et al. and with the present ones.

The discrepancy between the present results and those from Drummer et al. (6) might be due to the differences in the saline loading models used in the two studies. In the model from the Drummer et al. study, the volunteers ingested about 100 ml/h of mineral water until 22 ml/kg saline infusion was initiated. In the present experiments, as in other studies previously published (1, 14), a large water load was given to the volunteers (15 ml/kg and then 150 ml at 30-min intervals throughout the experiment), so as to promote a high rate of urine flow, which is essential to studies of renal excretory function and of GFR by clearance methods. The present experimental design provided an ability to void the sodium greater than in the study of Drummer et al. In the latter, 3 h after infusion, less than 20% of the sodium infused had been excreted whatever the experimental condition, whereas in the present study the corresponding figures were about 60% during the ambulatory period experiment and 40% during HDT. Although the high level of hydration we used was an advantage in permitting rather high sodium outputs, through an increased medullary washout (2), conversely it probably altered the hormonal responses to the saline load. It suppressed the arginine vasopressin secretion to undectable plasma levels, and thus by removing the inhibitory effects of arginine vasopressin on renin secretion, it may have in turn maintained PRA higher than what would have been observed without such a large water load. It is also possible that with high UVs such as those obtained in the present study, UNaV might be more dependent on oncotic force gradients and less on hormonal influences than in usual conditions of hydration. Regardless of these limitations, it should be emphasized that the present results are concordant with those obtained in space using a saline-loading protocol comprising a 400-ml water load (18).

The present findings should not be taken as evidence that HDT induces an excessive loss of plasma, leading to activation of neurohumoral mechanisms promoting retention of an infused saline load. It is hardly conceivable that HDT caused natriuresis and that the ensuing decrease in central blood volume overshot the cardiopulmonary baroreceptor load level seen in the control supine position. It is much more likely that the differences in water and sodium handling that we found between the HDT and ambulatory conditions were related to the body position chosen as the reference during the control period. Indeed, the choice of the control body posture is an important point to consider when interpreting data from experiments dealing with gravitational stress and volume regulation (17). During the ambulatory period, subjects were studied 2 h after changing from the upright to the supine position. Although such a time interval is usually considered adequate, it may not be long enough to allow achievement of a new steady state. In normovolemic subjects, changing from the upright to the supine position is responsible for a sudden fluid shift perceived by the thorax as a state of hypervolemia. Thus it is likely that the UNaV values measured during the ambulatory period after sodium loading reflected activation of volume-regulating mechanisms induced not only by the saline infusion but also by the redistribution of fluid in response to the change in body position. The ambulatory period UNaV values obtained during the first hours following the change from upright to supine may reflect a nonsteady state of increased central blood volume, whereas data obtained on the fourth HDT day may reflect a new steady state with a central blood volume likely to be similar to the one adapted to the upright posture. The fact that plasma Aldo was decreased by the sodium load during the HDT period but not during the ambulatory period is consistent with this hypothesis.

Therefore, using a saline-loading protocol comprising a large water load, so as to promote high urine and sodium excretion rates, and different in this regard from the one used in previous studies (6, 18), which might explain discrepant conclusions, we found that the natriuretic response to a saline load is blunted by exposure to a 3-day HDT compared with acute-supine control.

Perspectives

Fluid-regulating mechanisms are designed to maintain a central blood volume appropriate for counterbalancing the head-to-feet gravity vector. Given that humans spend about two-thirds of their time in the upright position, this latter posture may be a more appropriate control than the supine position in studies attempting to simulate microgravity. Further studies are warranted including acute seated control experiments to verify whether renal sodium excretory response to saline infusion is increased during HDT as it has been shown to be in space (18).


    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We are indebted to Monique Deriot, Robert Herigault, and Frédéric Thieffry (Hôpital Henri Mondor, Créteil) for their technical assistance.


    FOOTNOTES

This study was supported by a grant from the Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales, 2 place Maurice Quentin, 75-039 Paris, Cedex 01, France.

The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.

Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: Dr. Serge Adnot, Laboratoire de Physiologie et d'Explorations Fonctionnelles, Hôpital H Mondor, 94010 Créteil, France (E-mail: serge.adnot{at}hmn.ap-hop-paris.fr).

Received 1 July 1998; accepted in final form 21 June 1999.


    REFERENCES
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
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Am J Physiol Regul Integr Compar Physiol 277(5):R1444-R1452
0002-9513/99 $5.00 Copyright © 1999 the American Physiological Society



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