Arterial vasodilatory and ventricular diastolic reserves determine the stroke volume response to exercise in elderly female hypertensive patients

Author:

Sahlén Anders12,Abdula Goran23,Norman Mikael4,Manouras Aristomenis123,Brodin Lars-Åke3,Lund Lars H.1,Shahgaldi Kambiz13,Winter Reidar13

Affiliation:

1. Departments of 1Cardiology and

2. Clinical Physiology, Karolinska Institutet Karolinska University Hospital;

3. School of Technology and Health, Royal Institute of Technology; and

4. Department of Clinical Science, Intervention and Technology, Division of Pediatrics, Karolinska Institutet, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden

Abstract

Elderly female hypertensives with arterial stiffening constitute a majority of patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), a condition characterized by inability to increase cardiac stroke volume (SV) with physical exercise. As SV is determined by the interaction between the left ventricle (LV) and its load, we wished to study the role of arterial hemodynamics for exertional SV reserve in patients at high risk of HFpEF. Twenty-one elderly (67 ± 9 yr) female hypertensive patients were studied at rest and during supine bicycle stress using echocardiography including pulsed-wave Doppler to record flow in the LV outflow tract and arterial tonometry for central arterial pressure waveforms. Arterial compliance was estimated based on an exponential relationship between pressure and volume. The ratio of aortic pressure-to-flow in early systole was used to derive characteristic impedance, which was subsequently subtracted from total resistance (mean arterial pressure/cardiac output) to yield systemic vascular resistance (SVR). It was found that patients with depressed SV reserve ( NoRes; reserve <15%; n = 10) showed decreased arterial compliance during exercise, while patients with SV reserve ≥15% ( Res; n = 11) showed increased compliance. Exercise produced parallel increases in LV end-diastolic volume and arterial volume in Res patients while NoRes patients exhibited a lesser decrease in SVR and a drop in effective arterial volume. Poor SV reserve in elderly female hypertensives is due to simultaneous failure of LV preload and arterial vasodilatory reserves. Abnormal arterial function contributes to a high risk of HFpEF in these patients.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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