4.3 Article

Impaired sympathetic neural recruitment during exercise pressor reflex activation in women with post-traumatic stress disorder

Journal

CLINICAL AUTONOMIC RESEARCH
Volume 32, Issue 2, Pages 115-129

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s10286-022-00858-1

Keywords

PTSD; Metaboreflex; Muscle sympathetic nerve activity; Action potentials; Microneurography

Funding

  1. Harry S. Moss Heart Trust
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

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Patients with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) exhibit exaggerated sympathetic neural recruitment and impaired AP recruitment patterns during exercise.
Muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) increases during isometric exercise via increased firing of low-threshold action potentials (AP), recruitment of larger, higher-threshold APs, and synaptic delay modifications. Recent work found that women with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) demonstrate exaggerated early-onset MSNA responses to exercise; however, it is unclear how PTSD affects AP recruitment patterns during fatiguing exercise. We hypothesized that women with PTSD (n = 11, 43 [11] [SD] years) would exhibit exaggerated sympathetic neural recruitment compared to women without PTSD (controls; n = 13, 40 [8] years). MSNA and AP discharge patterns (via microneurography and a continuous wavelet transform) were measured during 1 min of baseline, isometric handgrip exercise (IHG) to fatigue, 2 min of post-exercise circulatory occlusion (PECO), and 3 min of recovery. Women with PTSD were unable to increase AP content per burst compared to controls throughout IHG and PECO (main effect of group: P = 0.026). Furthermore, relative to controls, women with PTSD recruited fewer AP clusters per burst during the first (controls: increment 1.3 [1.2] vs. PTSD: increment -0.2 [0.8]; P = 0.016) and second minute (controls: increment 1.2 [1.1] vs. PTSD: increment -0.1 [0.8]; P = 0.022) of PECO, and fewer subpopulations of larger, previously silent axons during the first (controls: increment 5 [4] vs. PTSD: increment 1 [2]; P = 0.020) and second minute (controls: increment 4 [2] vs. PTSD: increment 1 [2]; P = 0.021) of PECO. Conversely, PTSD did not modify the AP cluster size-latency relationship during baseline, the end of IHG, or PECO (all P = 0.658-0.745). Collectively, these data indicate that women with PTSD demonstrate inherent impairments in the fundamental neural coding patterns elicited by the sympathetic nervous system during IHG and exercise pressor reflex activation.

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