Lack of locomotor-cardiac coupling in trotting dogs

Author:

Simmons Adam D.1,Carrier David R.2,Farmer Colleen G.1,Gregersen Colin S.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island 02912; and

2. Department of Biology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112

Abstract

Coupling of locomotor and cardiac cycles has been suggested to facilitate effective arterial delivery and venous return during vigorous exercise. In an attempt to document locomotor-cardiac coupling, we ran five dogs on a motorized treadmill while monitoring heart activity with surface electrocardiogram electrodes and locomotor events with high-speed video and an accelerometer mounted on the dog’s back. Analysis of the cardiac and locomotor frequencies revealed that heart rate was usually slightly greater than stride frequency. Hence the timing of the cardiac cycles varied with respect to the phase of the locomotor cycles, and therefore consistent coupling of the locomotor and cardiac cycles was not observed in any of the dogs. However, the period of the cardiac cycle sometimes varied in a rhythmic way that caused brief periods of transient coupling of the locomotor and cardiac cycles in three of the five dogs. These brief periods of coupling (5–20 heartbeats) occurred at approximately the same phase relationship in each of the three dogs. We hypothesize that the variation in cardiac period and the resulting transient coupling are a function of locomotor and ventilatory influences on venous return and/or ventricular ejection. Because venous return and ejection fraction are likely to vary in an unpredictable manner when animals run in a complex environment, we suggest that reflex control of heart rate will be important during locomotion and strict integer coupling of the locomotor and cardiac cycles is unlikely to evolve.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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