
Oral contraceptives augment the exercise pressor reflex during isometric handgrip exercise
Author(s) -
Minahan Clare,
O'Neill Hailey,
Sikkema Nelie,
Joyce Sarah,
Larsen Brianna,
Sabapathy Surendran
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
physiological reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.918
H-Index - 39
ISSN - 2051-817X
DOI - 10.14814/phy2.13629
Subject(s) - gold coast , excellence , medicine , history , archaeology , political science , law
We sought to determine whether oral contraception alters the gender‐related differences observed in the exercise pressor reflex during isometric handgrip exercise. Fifteen men, fifteen normally menstruating women (Women NM ), and fifteen women taking monophasic oral contraceptives (Women OC ) completed two trials of a 3‐min isometric handgrip exercise protocol performed at 30% of their maximal voluntary contraction: (1) where arterial occlusion was applied to the previously exercising arm during a 3‐min recovery period (Occlusion trial); (2) where no arterial occlusion was applied during recovery (Control trial). Handgrip exercise elicited greater increases in mean arterial pressure ( MAP ) in MEN compared to both female groups ( P < 0.05), and in Women OC compared to Women NM in both trials ( P = 0.01, P = 0.03). After 3 min of recovery, sBP was 12% ( P = 0.01) and 9% ( P = 0.02) higher in the Occlusion trial when compared to the Control trial for MEN and Women OC . Conversely, arterial occlusion in recovery from handgrip did not sustain elevated sBP in the Occlusion trial, and sBP returned to recovery levels not different to the Control trial, in Women NM ( P = 0.41). These data indicate that gender‐related differences in the metaboreflex during isometric handgrip exercise exist between men and normally menstruating women, but are blunted when men are compared to women taking oral contraceptives. We conclude that the suppression of 17 β ‐estradiol and/or progestogen in women via the administration of oral contraceptives attenuates sex‐related differences in the metaboreflex during isometric handgrip exercise.