
Autonomic responses to cold face stimulation in sickle cell disease: a time‐varying model analysis
Author(s) -
Chalacheva Patjanaporn,
Kato Roberta M.,
Sangkatumvong Suvimol,
Detterich Jon,
Bush Adam,
Wood John C.,
Meiselman Herbert,
Coates Thomas D.,
Khoo Michael C. K.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
physiological reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.918
H-Index - 39
ISSN - 2051-817X
DOI - 10.14814/phy2.12463
Subject(s) - baroreflex , medicine , cardiology , heart rate , autonomic nervous system , blood pressure , heart rate variability , vascular resistance , sympathetic nervous system , stimulation , anesthesia
Sickle cell disease ( SCD ) is characterized by sudden onset of painful vaso‐occlusive crises ( VOC ), which occur on top of the underlying chronic blood disorder. The mechanisms that trigger VOC remain elusive, but recent work suggests that autonomic dysfunction may be an important predisposing factor. Heart‐rate variability has been employed in previous studies, but the derived indices have provided only limited univariate information about autonomic cardiovascular control in SCD . To circumvent this limitation, a time‐varying modeling approach was applied to investigate the functional mechanisms relating blood pressure (BP) and respiration to heart rate and peripheral vascular resistance in healthy controls, untreated SCD subjects and SCD subjects undergoing chronic transfusion therapy. Measurements of respiration, heart rate, continuous noninvasive BP and peripheral vascular resistance were made before, during and after the application of cold face stimulation ( CFS ), which perturbs both the parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous systems. Cardiac baroreflex sensitivity estimated from the model was found to be impaired in nontransfused SCD subjects, but partially restored in SCD subjects undergoing transfusion therapy. Respiratory‐cardiac coupling gain was decreased in SCD and remained unchanged by chronic transfusion. These results are consistent with autonomic dysfunction in the form of impaired parasympathetic control and sympathetic overactivity. As well, CFS led to a significant reduction in vascular resistance baroreflex sensitivity in the nontransfused SCD subjects but not in the other groups. This blunting of the baroreflex control of peripheral vascular resistance during elevated sympathetic drive could be a potential factor contributing to the triggering of VOC in SCD .