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University of Pittsburgh School of Nursing, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261
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ABSTRACT |
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Pregnancy is associated with blunted reflex responses to
cardiac and arterial baroreceptor stimulation. We tested the hypothesis that arterial baroreceptor afferent discharge is attenuated in response
to a pressure stimulus in pregnant rats. Multifiber aortic depressor
nerve activity (ADNA), mean arterial pressure (MAP), and heart rate
were measured in anesthetized (pentobarbital sodium, 35 mg/kg ip)
late-pregnant and virgin rats in response to increases [phenylephrine (PE), 1.5-24
µg · kg
1 · min
1
and 1-16 µg/kg] and decreases [sodium nitroprusside
(SNP), 5-80 µg · kg
1 · min
1
and 0.05-16 µg/kg] in MAP. Resting MAP was lower in
pregnant rats, but changes in MAP were similar to those in virgin rats during both PE and SNP administration. ADNA was significantly attenuated in pregnant animals during both PE and SNP infusions (P < 0.05) due to a more rapid adaptation to the pressure
stimulus. Bolus drug administration evoked similar changes in MAP and
ADNA in both groups; however, the maximum decrease in ADNA was achieved at the lowest dose of SNP in pregnant rats. Thus baroreceptor afferent
discharge is attenuated in pregnant rats, and this involves a more
rapid adaptation to a pressure stimulus.
baroreflex; aortic depressor nerve; phenylephrine; nitroprusside
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INTRODUCTION |
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PREGNANCY IS ASSOCIATED with marked alterations in cardiovascular function, including a large increase in plasma volume and cardiac output but a decrease in arterial blood pressure. These changes are measured early in gestation and are maintained until late pregnancy. The maintenance of these hemodynamic changes suggests that autonomic regulatory mechanisms are also altered during gestation. It is known that the arterial baroreflex rapidly resets when arterial pressure is lowered (29); thus, it should be expected that the reduction in prevailing blood pressure during pregnancy would shift the baroreflex curve to a lower pressure set point. Baroreflex resetting may thus allow the reduction in vascular resistance to be maintained throughout pregnancy, and there is evidence to support a shift to a lower operating pressure in pregnant rats (11, 26).
Evidence to date also indicates that the sensitivity (gain) of the baroreflex curve is changed during pregnancy, and this change may differ at the low-pressure compared with the high-pressure ends of the curve. For example, Humphreys and Joels (21) demonstrated a smaller range of reflex blood pressure responses to changing carotid sinus pressures in pregnant compared with nonpregnant rabbits, most prominent at the low-pressure end of the baroreflex curve. More recently, Brooks and Keil (2) showed that changes in heart rate (HR) in pregnant dogs and sympathetic nerve activity in pregnant rabbits (3) were attenuated in response to decreases in blood pressure. Crandall and Heesch (11) and Masalimani and Heesch (26) have also reported smaller changes in sympathetic nerve activity in pregnant compared with virgin rats, particularly during hypotension. Possible changes in baroreflex-mediated responses to elevations in arterial pressure during pregnancy have been equivocal. Elimination of the baroreflex by sinoaortic denervation did not affect the differences in pressor responses to three different vasoconstrictor agonists in pregnant compared with virgin rats, suggesting that the sensitivity of the baroreflex to increases in blood pressure is not altered by pregnancy (18). In contrast, the maximum reflex decreases in renal sympathetic nerve activity (11, 26) and HR (10) were larger in pregnant rats in response to increases in mean blood pressure (MAP). It may be, therefore, that the gain of the baroreflex during pregnancy is different at low compared with high pressures; however, when the entire baroreflex curve (responses to low and high pressures) has been analyzed, an overall blunting of reflex function has been reported (3). It has also been shown that baroreflex function is attenuated in human pregnancy (13), a finding that could contribute to conditions such as orthostatic and supine hypotension. Baroreflex sensitivity may be further reduced in women with preeclampsia (22).
Mechanisms for alterations in baroreflex function during pregnancy are not known; however, it has been observed that baroreflex activity in nonpregnant animals is modulated by some of the circulating substances that are altered during pregnancy. For example, steroid hormones, such as estrogen, that increase throughout pregnancy were found to increase baroreflex gain (28). Central nervous system modulation of the baroreflex during pregnancy by progesterone metabolites has also been proposed (17). Little is known, however, about possible gestational changes in the baroreceptor itself, and attenuated afferent discharge in response to a pressure stimulus could also contribute to blunted reflex effects. This study, therefore, was designed to characterize baroreceptor activity in response to changes in arterial pressure in the pregnant rat and to test the hypothesis that afferent discharge in response to a given pressure stimulus is attenuated in pregnant compared with virgin rats.
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METHODS |
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Virgin Sprague-Dawley (Hilltop Animal Labs, Scottdale, PA) rats were mated (n = 9) or served as age-matched controls (n = 9). Day 1 of pregnancy was determined by the presence of sperm in the vaginal smear and experiments were conducted on gestational day 20 (rat pregnancy = 22 days). Animals were maintained on a 12:12-h light-dark cycle and were fed standard rat chow during the gestational period.
Surgical procedures. Rats were anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium (35 mg/kg ip), and supplemental anesthesia (10 mg/kg iv) was administered as necessary to maintain a stable blood pressure and absence of reflex withdrawal to hindpaw pinch. Catheters were inserted into a femoral artery and both femoral veins for measurement of arterial pressure and drug infusions, respectively. The trachea was cannulated, and animals breathed room air unassisted in all experiments. Through a midline cervical incision, the left aortic depressor nerve (ADN) was gently dissected caudally from its junction with the superior laryngeal nerve. The ADN was mounted intact on a bipolar stainless steel electrode, and multifiber nerve activity was amplified 5,000-10,000 times, filtered between 100 and 1,000 Hz, and fed to an oscilloscope, audio monitor, and signal rectifier. After an optimum signal was obtained, the nerve was protected with lightweight silicon impression material (Coltene/Whaledent, New York, NY). Rectified aortic depressor nerve activity (ADNA) was sampled at 8 kHz and along with arterial pressure was digitized and displayed on a computer monitor (Spike2; Cambridge Electronic Design, Cambridge, UK).
Experimental procedures.
Arterial pressure and ADNA were recorded in response to constant
cumulative infusions of phenylephrine (PE, 1.5-24
µg · kg
1 · min
1)
and sodium nitroprusside (SNP, 5-80
µg · kg
1 · min
1).
Each dose was infused for 10 min at an initial rate of 1.7 µl/min.
Doses were increased by successively doubling the infusion rate so that
the total volume infused was 0.53 ml. Arterial pressure and ADNA were
measured during the first and last minutes of each dose infusion. To
assess the baroreceptor response to an acute increase in arterial
pressure, PE (1-16 µg/kg) and SNP (0.5-16 µg/kg) were
also administered as intravenous bolus injections. Doses of PE or SNP
were injected in random order and separated by 10 min. Postmortem nerve
activity was measured after euthanasia (KCl) and was subtracted from
all raw ADNA levels before analysis.
Data analysis.
HR was derived from the arterial pressure pulse and displayed as a
marker on the data file. During constant infusions, MAP, HR, and
rectified ADNA were calculated (1-s bins) during a 60-s baseline
recording and during the first and last minutes of each dose infusion.
Baseline MAP, HR, and ADNA during bolus dose administration were
averaged in the 30 s preceding an injection, and changes in these
variables were measured at the peak of their response (
5- to 10-s
segments). Statistical analysis of baseline values was done using
analysis of variance (ANOVA). Changes in variables in response to PE
and SNP infusions and bolus doses were compared using repeated-measures
ANOVA. Slopes and y-intercepts relating MAP to HR or ADNA were
calculated using least squares linear regression analysis and compared
between groups by analysis of covariance (Statistica; StatSoft, Tulsa,
OK). To assess the between- group differences in adaptation of
baroreceptor discharge, two different analyses were used. Changes in
ADNA (expressed as percent of baseline) from the 1st to the 10th minute
of each dose infusion were compared between groups by ANOVA. In
addition, the ADNA dose response measured during the 1st minute of each
drug dose was compared with the dose response measured during the 10th
minute by repeated-measures ANOVA. A nonlinear logistic analysis of the
ADNA/MAP correlation during the 10th minute of each dose was attempted;
however, maximum ADNA values were not achieved in virgin rats at the
doses of PE used; therefore, a complete statistical comparison of
logistic parameters between groups was not possible. Nevertheless, we
did attempt to estimate certain logistical parameters by artificially setting maxima in virgin rats using statistical extrapolation of
missing data points (Statistica). Data are presented as means ± SE, and significance was set at P < 0.05.
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RESULTS |
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Effects on constant infusions of PE and SNP on ADNA.
Resting MAP was significantly lower in pregnant compared with virgin
rats before constant infusions (Fig. 1).
Although MAP remained lower in pregnant rats, constant, cumulative
infusions of PE and SNP (10 min/dose) evoked dose-dependent increases
and decreases in MAP that were similar in both groups (Fig. 1).
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1 · min
1)
in one pregnant and one nonpregnant rat are shown in Fig.
3. Although pressure was sustained at a
comparable level during the 10 min of the infusion in both animals,
ADNA showed marked adaptation to the stimulus in the gravid (Fig. 3,
C and D) compared with the virgin rat (Fig. 3,
A and B).
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0.09 ± 0.06, virgin slope =
0.54 ± 0.2; P < 0.05). During SNP infusions, there
was little change in HR in either group, and slopes were not different
(Fig. 6B: pregnant slope =
0.02 ± 0.02, virgin slope =
0.38 ± 0.18).
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Effects of bolus injections of PE and SNP on ADNA.
Basal MAP before bolus injection of PE and SNP was significantly lower
in pregnant (105.9 ± 4.2 mmHg) compared with virgin rats (123.5 ± 2.9 mmHg). Changes in MAP and ADNA during bolus injections of both PE
(Fig. 7A) and SNP injections (Fig.
7B) were similar in both groups. The slopes of the correlations
between ADNA and MAP, plotted as a function of percent change, during bolus PE (Fig. 7A: pregnant = 2.75 ± 0.98, virgin = 4.40 ± 1.5) and SNP injections (Fig. 7B: pregnant = 2.0 ± 0.92, virgin = 1.54 ± 1.1) were also not different between groups. There
was a tendency toward an attenuated slope in pregnant rats during PE
injections, but this difference was not statistically significant
(P = 0.11). Baroreceptor afferent activity hit a nadir with the
first dose of SNP in pregnant animals and returned to that level with
each succeeding dose (Fig. 7B). The relationships between HR
and MAP were also similar between groups during the acute pressure
changes evoked by bolus injections of PE (pregnant =
46 ± 0.10, virgin =
0.40 ± 0.18) or SNP (pregnant =
0.11 ± 0.09, virgin =
0.13 ± 0.08; data not shown).
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DISCUSSION |
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This study compared baroreceptor afferent discharge in response to increases and decreases in arterial pressure in pregnant and virgin rats. We found that the slopes of the relationships between ADNA and MAP during constant infusions of PE and SNP were attenuated in pregnant rats because of a more rapid adaptation of baroreceptors to a pressure stimulus. This contrasted with the similar ADNA response to acute pressure changes during bolus administration of the two agonists. Adaptation, or resetting, of baroreceptors in response to changes in prevailing arterial pressure is well known (6, 23, 29). Adaptation involves a shift in the operating set point of the receptor to levels that are closer to the new prevailing pressure and may also involve changes in the sensitivity or gain of the baroreceptor reflex. For example, during chronic hypertension, baroreceptors reset to a higher pressure and baroreflex responses are attenuated compared with the control state (6). Adaptation of baroreceptors to increases and decreases in pressure is known to be rapid, occurring within minutes to a few hours of exposure to changes in arterial pressure (5, 29). Thus, the chronic reduction in MAP during pregnancy most likely results in resetting of the baroreceptors toward lower prevailing pressures. This concept is supported by evidence of shifts in the midpoint of baroreflex curves for control of renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) (11) and HR (26) to lower operating pressures in pregnant rats. The increases in MAP evoked by PE infusion in the present study did not raise ADNA to a maximum in virgin rats; therefore, analysis of the curve midpoint could not be compared with that in pregnant rats. Linear regression analysis of either end of the baroreflex curve, however, revealed significantly different y-intercepts, indicating a left shift in the baroreceptor response to increases or decreases in pressure. Thus it appears that the shift in baroreceptor activity during pregnancy parallels the shift in reflex responses to baroreceptor activation that have been reported (3, 11, 26).
Whether baroreflex sensitivity (gain) is altered by pregnancy has been a subject of debate. Baroreflex control, primarily of HR during hypertension, has been reported to be increased (10), decreased (3, 27), or unchanged (26). Indeed, our own study reported no differential effects of sinoaortic denervation on pressor responses to several vasoconstrictors in pregnant compared with virgin rats (18). These disparate findings may relate to use of anesthetized or conscious preparations, species differences, vasoactive agonists used, and methods of analysis. In contrast to the varying reports of baroreflex responses to hypertension, baroreflex control of HR and sympathetic nerve activity during hypotension has been more consistently shown to be attenuated in the pregnant animal (2, 11, 21, 26). In the present study, baroreceptor activity in response to decreases in blood pressure was clearly shifted to the left, and the slope of this relationship, when plotted as a function of the percent change in MAP, was significantly blunted. Thus the reduction in baroreceptor afferent input in the pregnant rat supports the findings of blunted efferent reflex effects during hypotension. The curve relating ADNA to MAP during increases in pressure in pregnant rats intersected the curve in virgin rats, suggesting that the level of pressure attained may influence the comparison between groups. This observation could help to explain some of the divergent reports of baroreflex sensitivity during increases in pressure; that is, depending on the range of pressure evoked, baroreceptor reflex responses could appear augmented, unchanged, or blunted. When ADNA was plotted as a function of the percent change in MAP during PE infusions, however, a significant attenuation of the curve was observed, as has been noted at the low-pressure end of the curve as well. Brooks et al. (3) have concluded that examination of the entire baroreflex curve, that is, reflex responses to loading and unloading of baroreceptors, indicates an overall blunting of baroreflex control during pregnancy, and our findings confirm this hypothesis.
Changes in HR were measured in this study to assess reflex effects of baroreceptor stimulation. In anesthetized pregnant rats, HR was essentially unchanged in response to the range of pressures evoked by PE or SNP infusions. The lack of reflex change in HR is consistent with blunting of afferent baroreceptor input and/or faster adaptation to a pressure stimulus in this group, but it is unclear why there was no HR change during changes in arterial pressure. Pregnant rats had baseline HR that were relatively high, particularly during SNP infusions, and this may have affected the ability to increase HR; that is, baseline HR may have been close to maximum. The range of pressures evoked by PE and SNP infusions was also limited in pregnant animals and may not have provided an effective stimulus. Although a relatively low dose of pentobarbital sodium (35 mg/kg) was used in this study, there may have been a differential effect of anesthesia on reflex responses in pregnant vs. virgin rats. It is clear that HR does change in response to pressure changes in pregnant animals, since there was measurable bradycardia in response to acute changes in pressure with PE. Reflex tachycardia during SNP injections was minimal in both groups, again suggesting that the resting levels were close to the maximal plateau. Further studies will be needed to correlate reflex changes in sympathetic outflow with baroreceptor afferent discharge to develop a more complete picture of changes in baroreflex gain during pregnancy.
Bolus administration of PE and SNP was employed to compare the effects of acute changes in pressure with the more sustained (10 min/dose) changes evoked by constant infusions. In contrast to the attenuation of slopes relating ADNA and MAP in pregnant rats during constant infusions, the ADNA/MAP correlation during bolus injections was similar in both groups. During bolus SNP injections, ADNA in pregnant but not in virgin rats hit a nadir immediately in response to the first decrease in MAP and plateaued at that level in response to all other higher doses. Thus, although presumably baroreceptors reset to operate nearer the lower arterial pressure of pregnancy, it may be that the new operating point is close to the limit of the receptors' ability to respond to hypotension. This possibility would contribute to the more rapid decline in MAP during hypotensive hemorrhage (3) and the smaller increases in sympathetic nerve activity during hypotension (11, 26) that have been reported. The gain of baroreceptor responses to acute changes in pressure, however, was not altered in pregnant compared with virgin rats, suggesting similarly effective buffering of transient pressure changes, at least within the range of pressures evoked in this study. When an alteration in pressure was maintained for even 10 min, however, baroreceptors in pregnant rats rapidly adapted, rendering the animal less able to compensate for changes in blood pressure. This pattern of baroreceptor adaptation at high pressures could lead to the further reduction in baroreflex sensitivity that has been observed in severe preeclampsia (1) and could contribute to the sustained vasoconstriction characteristic of this disease state.
Mechanisms that modulate baroreceptor activity include mechanical
factors related to stretch or distortion of the nerve ending, as well
as humoral factors, such as endothelial cell-derived substances and
circulating hormones (4, 7, 28). Nitric oxide (NO) is known to suppress
baroreceptor activity (7), and pregnancy is associated with increased
synthesis of NO (9). Thus prolonged exposure to a pressure change could
possibly stimulate increased release of NO in the aortic arch and
attenuate baroreceptor firing. Pregnant rats and humans are also
hyponatremic (25), and the reduction in extracellular sodium
concentration could play a role in attenuated baroreceptor discharge,
as was reported by Thoren et al. (30) in nonmyelinated
baroreceptor afferent fibers from nonpregnant rats. The relatively long
(50 min) exposure to changes in arterial blood pressure likely
activated hormones such as angiotensin II and vasopressin. These
peptides are known to modulate the baroreflex centrally (15, 31), and
we cannot rule out a differential effect on baroreceptor afferent
discharge in the two groups. These possibilities will require further
investigation. There is evidence that aortic compliance is increased in
normal human pregnancy (16). Presumably this mechanical adaptation
would lead to increased stretch of baroreceptor nerve endings in the
aorta, thus increased baroreceptor firing. Whether this observation
extends to the rat aorta during pregnancy is not known, but, if so,
this would most likely be associated with increased rather
than decreased baroreceptor activity. Plasma levels of estrogen
hormones rise steadily throughout pregnancy in the rat (14), and
17
-estradiol administration to male rats has been
shown to augment baroreflex sensitivity (28). If estrogen is
influencing the baroreflex in the late-pregnant rat, however, it does
not appear to be enhancing activity at the level of the peripheral
baroreceptor. Although mechanisms for alterations in baroreceptor
activity remain to be elucidated, it does appear that during pregnancy
afferent information from baroreceptors regarding sustained changes in
pressure is reduced at extremes of arterial pressure. The blunted
afferent signal presumably would result in an attenuated ability to
buffer changes in pressure and could contribute to findings, such as
the more rapid drop in MAP during hemorrhage in pregnant dogs (2), or to the higher incidence of postural hypotension in pregnant women (20,
22). How baroreceptor afferent input is processed centrally could also
influence reflex effects in the pregnant animal, and there is evidence
that elevated levels of progesterone metabolites, known to be increased
during pregnancy, may modulate baroreflex activity at brainstem sites
(24, 26).
In summary, the aortic baroreceptor response to sustained increases and decreases in arterial pressure is attenuated in late-pregnant compared with virgin rats. This attenuation involves a more rapid adaptation to the pressure stimulus in the gravid animal. In addition, baroreceptor activity in the pregnant rat appears to be shifted toward the lower arterial pressure of pregnancy and may be operating close to the minimum firing level. Baroreceptor firing during acute pressure changes in pregnant rats is similar to that in the nonpregnant state, suggesting no change in the ability to buffer transient changes in pressure during pregnancy. How these gestational alterations in baroreceptor discharge are transduced and integrated centrally will need to be further defined; however, the findings of the present study suggest that attenuated afferent baroreceptor activity in pregnant compared with virgin rats contributes significantly to blunted baroreflex effects during pregnancy.
Perspectives
Many reports in experimental animals (2, 3, 10, 11, 17, 21, 26) and humans (13, 20, 22) have described alterations in baroreflex activity during pregnancy. Indeed, it appears that devastating conditions, such as preeclampsia, may be associated with exaggerated changes in baroreflex function (1). Alterations in baroreflex responses during pregnancy could be due to changes in the afferent receptor, central integration sites, or effector targets. It is known that the responsiveness of a primary effector target, vascular smooth muscle, is attenuated during pregnancy (8, 12), and there is also evidence implicating central integration sites in baroreflex changes (17, 26). This is the first report of gestational attenuation of the afferent limb of the baroreflex. The important new finding is that aortic baroreceptors in the pregnant rat adapt more rapidly to a sustained pressure stimulus. The reduction in afferent input during pregnancy could contribute to attenuation of reflex effects, particularly those reported in response to unloading of baroreceptors (2, 3, 11, 26), and could play a role in conditions, such as supine and orthostatic hypotension in the pregnant human (20, 22). We have recently presented preliminary data describing attenuation of activity in cardiac receptors in pregnant rats in response to increases in right atrial pressure (19). Those receptors were also rapidly adapting. Thus, it may be that there is a global gestational effect on autonomic regulation that includes all components of the reflex arc. The new findings of attenuated afferent discharge imply that studies of the central and efferent mechanisms of autonomic regulation during pregnancy will have to take into account differential activity in afferent receptors.| |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant NR-04184.
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FOOTNOTES |
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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: T. Hines, Univ. of Pittsburgh School of Nursing, 440 Victoria Bldg., Pittsburgh, PA 15261 (E-mail: thine{at}pitt.edu).
Received 8 July 1999; accepted in final form 13 January 2000.
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V. L. Brooks, K. A. Clow, and K. P. O'Hagan Pregnancy and acute baroreflex resetting in conscious rabbits Am J Physiol Regulatory Integrative Comp Physiol, August 1, 2002; 283(2): R429 - R440. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. D. Laiprasert, R. L. Hamlin, and C. M. Heesch Afferent baroreceptor discharge in pregnant rats Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol, December 1, 2001; 281(6): H2456 - H2462. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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