4.5 Review

Muscle sympathetic activity in resting and exercising humans with and without heart failure

Journal

APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY NUTRITION AND METABOLISM
Volume 40, Issue 11, Pages 1107-1115

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/apnm-2015-0289

Keywords

exercise; heart failure; HFrEF; microneurography; muscle sympathetic nerve activity; exercise training; peak oxygen uptake

Funding

  1. Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada [NA6298]
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research

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The sympathetic nervous system is critical for coordinating the cardiovascular response to various types of physical exercise. In a number of disease states, including human heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), this regulation can be disturbed and adversely affect outcome. The purpose of this review is to describe sympathetic activity at rest and during exercise in both healthy humans and those with HFrEF and outline factors, which influence these responses. We focus predominately on studies that report direct measurements of efferent sympathetic nerve traffic to skeletal muscle (muscle sympathetic nerve activity; MSNA) using intraneural microneurographic recordings. Differences in MSNA discharge between subjects with and without HFrEF both at rest and during exercise and the influence of exercise training on the sympathetic response to exercise will be discussed. In contrast to healthy controls, MSNA increases during mild to moderate dynamic exercise in the presence of HFrEF. This increase may contribute to the exercise intolerance characteristic of HFrEF by limiting muscle blood flow and may be attenuated by exercise training. Future investigations are needed to clarify the neural afferent mechanisms that contribute to efferent sympathetic activation at rest and during exercise in HFrEF.

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