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J Appl Physiol 93: 297-303, 2002. First published April 5, 2002; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00899.2001
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Vol. 93, Issue 1, 297-303, July 2002

Mechanisms of sympathoexcitation: single-unit analysis of muscle vasoconstrictor neurons in awake OSAS subjects

Mikael Elam1, David McKenzie2, and Vaughan Macefield1

1 Prince of Wales Medical Research Institute and 2 Department of Respiratory Medicine, Prince of Wales Hospital, Randwick, New South Wales 2031, Australia

In congestive heart failure (CHF), muscle sympathetic activity (MSNA) is greatly elevated, but our laboratory has shown that single muscle vasoconstrictor neurons primarily fire only once per cardiac interval, as in normal subjects (Elam M and Macefield VG. J Appl Physiol 91: 717-724, 2001; Macefield VG, Rundqvist B, Sverrisdottir YB, Wallin BG, and Elam M. Circulation 100: 1708-1713, 1999). In this study, we used patients with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) to test the hypothesis that this firing pattern is maintained in other states of sympathoexcitation. Unitary recordings were made from muscle vasoconstrictor neurons in eight awake OSAS patients. The average firing frequency of 12 units was 0.96 Hz and the firing probability 51%, similar to previous observations in CHF patients (0.98 Hz, 55%) but higher than in healthy subjects (0.40 Hz, 31%). However, the percentages of cardiac intervals in which neurons generated one, two, three, or four spikes were 59, 27, 10, and 3% in OSAS, compared with 71, 18, 7, and 2% in CHF and 73, 18, 5, and 3% in healthy subjects. Thus the firing pattern is different in OSAS and CHF, leading to rejection of the hypothesis: although in both conditions individual neurons show an increase in firing probability, in OSAS patients they also fire more often within a cardiac interval. It is likely that differences may also be apparent in other states of sympathoexcitation.

microneurography; sympathoexcitation; obstructive sleep apnea syndrome; ectopic beats; muscle sympathetic nerve activity


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