4.4 Article

Hypergravity exercise against bed rest induced changes in cardiac autonomic control

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 94, Issue 3, Pages 285-291

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00421-004-1308-x

Keywords

Artificial gravity; Ergometer; Baroreflex; Autonomic nervous system; Microgravity

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An intermittent exposure to artificial hypergravity with physical exercise by a human centrifuge may provide a countermeasure against various physiological problems after space flight. To test the effects of hypergravity with ergometric exercise on dynamic regulation of heart rate during weightlessness, we quantified autonomic cardiovascular control before and after head-down-tilt bed rest (HDBR) with and without the countermeasure. Twelve male subjects underwent a 14-day period of HDBR. Six of them were exposed to a hypergravity (+1.2 Gz acceleration at heart level) for 30 min with ergometric exercise (60 W, n=4; 40 W, n=2) as a countermeasure on day 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 12, 13 and 14, during HDBR (CM group). The remaining six were not exposed to a hypergravity exercise during HDBR (control group). Blood pressure and ECG were recorded at a supine position before and after HDBR. The high frequency power of R-R interval (HFRR; 1,008238 to 35356 ms2 P<0.05) as an index of cardiac parasympathetic activity, and transfer function gain between BP and R-R interval in the high frequency range (GainHF; 21.95.4 to 14.54.2 ms/mmHg, P<0.01) as an index of vagally mediated arterial-cardiac baroreflex, decreased significantly after HDBR in the control group. However, these changes were not statistically significant in the CM group (HFRR, 1,150344 to 768385ms2; GainHF, 21.53.3 to 18.63.4 ms/mmHg). Moreover, baroreflex gain by sequence analysis showed similar results. This observation suggests that the intermittent exposure to hypergravity with ergometric exercise may attenuate the decreases in the parasympathetic activity and the spontaneous arterial-cardiac baroreflex function after weightlessness.

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