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Reproducibility of a continuous ramp lower body negative pressure protocol for simulating hemorrhage
Author(s) -
Kay Victoria L.,
Rickards Caroline A.
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/phy2.12640
Subject(s) - presyncope , hypovolemia , medicine , hemodynamics , heart rate , mean arterial pressure , blood pressure , stroke volume , anesthesia , cardiology , cardiac output
Abstract Central hypovolemia elicited by application of lower body negative pressure ( LBNP ) has been used extensively to simulate hemorrhage in human subjects. Traditional LBNP protocols incorporate progressive steps in pressure held for specific time intervals. The aim of this study was to assess the reproducibility of applying continuous LBNP at a constant rate until presyncope to replicate actual bleeding. During two trials (≥4 weeks intervening), LBNP was applied at a rate of 3 mmHg/min in 18 healthy human subjects (12M; 6F) until the onset of presyncopal symptoms. Heart rate ( HR ), mean arterial pressure ( MAP ), stroke volume ( SV ), total peripheral resistance ( TPR ), mean middle and posterior cerebral artery velocities ( MCA v, PCA v), and cerebral oxygen saturation (ScO 2 ) were measured continuously. Time to presyncope ( TTPS ) and hemodynamic responses were compared between the two trials. TTPS (1649 ± 98 sec vs. 1690 ± 88 sec; P  = 0.47 [ t ‐test]; r  = 0.77) and the subsequent magnitude of central hypovolemia (%Δ SV −54 ± 4% vs. −53 ± 4%; P  = 0.55) were similar between trials. There were no statistically distinguishable differences at either baseline ( P  ≥ 0.17) or presyncope between trials for HR , MAP , TPR , mean MCA v, mean PCA v, or ScO 2 ( P  ≥ 0.19). The rate of change from baseline to presyncope for all hemodynamic responses was also similar between trials ( P  ≥ 0.12). Continuous LBNP applied at a rate of 3 mmHg/min was reproducible in healthy human subjects, eliciting similar reductions in central blood volume and subsequent reflex hemodynamic responses.

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