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Blood pressure, sympathovagal tone, exercise capacity and metabolic status are linked in Turner syndrome
Author(s) -
Brun Sara,
Berglund Agnethe,
Mortensen Kristian H.,
Hjerrild Britta E.,
Hansen Klavs W.,
Andersen Niels H.,
Gravholt Claus H.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
clinical endocrinology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.055
H-Index - 147
eISSN - 1365-2265
pISSN - 0300-0664
DOI - 10.1111/cen.13983
Subject(s) - medicine , endocrinology , turner syndrome , blood pressure , tone (literature) , turner's syndrome , cardiology , art , literature
Abstract Objectives We studied cardiac autonomic changes in relation to metabolic factors, body composition and 24‐hour ambulatory blood pressure measurements in Turner syndrome patients without known hypertension. Design Cross sectional. Patients Participants were 48 TS women and 24 healthy female controls aged over 18 years. Methods Short‐term power spectral analysis was obtained in supine‐standing‐supine position. Bedside tests included three conventional cardiovascular reflex tests of heart rate response to standing up, heart rate response to deep breathing and blood pressure response to standing up. Mean heart rate during the last 2 minutes of work was used to calculate the maximal aerobic power (VO 2max ). Results We found a significantly higher mean reciprocal of the heart rate per second (RR) in TS. Testing for interaction between position and status (TS or control), there were highly significant differences between TS and controls in high‐frequency (HF) power, the coefficient of component variation (square root of HF power/mean RR) and low‐frequency (LF): HF ratio, with a dampened decline in vagal activity among TS during standing. Bedside test showed TS had a significantly higher diastolic BP in the supine position compared to controls, and the adaptive rise in BP, when changing to upright position was reduced. VO 2max and self‐reported level of physical activity were significantly correlated to systolic ambulatory blood pressure both 24‐hour and night diastolic ambulatory blood pressure. Conclusion Vagal tone and modulation of the sympathovagal balance during alteration in body position are impaired in TS. These changes can be risk factors for cardiovascular disease.

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