Limb venous compliance in patients with idiopathic orthostatic intolerance and postural tachycardia

Author:

Freeman Roy1,Lirofonis Vasilios1,Farquhar William B.12,Risk Marcelo1

Affiliation:

1. Center for Autonomic and Peripheral Nerve Disorders, Department of Neurology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston 02215l; and

2. Laboratory for Cardiovascular Research, Division on Aging, Hebrew Rehabilitation Center for Aged, Research and Training Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02131

Abstract

Venous denervation and increased venous pooling may contribute to symptoms of orthostatic intolerance. We examined venous compliance in the calf and forearm in 11 orthostatic-intolerant patients and 15 age-matched controls over a range of pressures, during basal conditions and sympathetic excitation. Occlusion cuffs placed around the upper arm and thigh were inflated to 60 mmHg and deflated to 10 mmHg over 1 min. Limb volume was measured continuously with a mercury-in-Silastic strain gauge. Compliance was calculated as the numerical derivative of the pressure-volume curve. The pressure-volume relationship in the upper and lower extremities in the basal and sympathetically activated state was significantly lower in the orthostatic-intolerant patients (all P < 0.05). Sympathoexcitation lowered the pressure-volume relationship in the lower extremity in patients ( P < 0.001) and controls ( P < 0.01). Venous compliance was significantly less in patients in the lower extremity in the basal state over a range of pressures ( P < 0.05). Venous compliance was less in patients compared with controls in the upper ( P < 0.005) and lower extremities ( P < 0.01) in the sympathetically activated state, but there were no differences at individual pressure levels. Sympathetic activation did not change venous compliance in the upper and lower extremity in patients and controls. Patients with orthostatic intolerance have reduced venous compliance in the lower extremity. Reduced compliance may limit the dynamic response to orthostatic change and thereby contribute to symptoms of orthostatic intolerance in this population group.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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