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  • 1
    ISSN: 1469-8986
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine , Psychology
    Notes: The relationship between blood pressure reactivity and the perception of pain was examined during a series of three forehead cold pressor tests given every other day to a group of 18 male college students. Subjects classified as high reactors on the basis of peak increases in mean blood pressure during cold pressor tests perceived the cold pressor stimulus as more painful than subjects classified as low reactors. The propensity to rate the cold pressor stimulus as painful was positively correlated with the individual level of blood pressure reactivity (baseline-free partial r=.62). Intra-individual correlations between pain and blood pressure responses were unrelated to subjects' reactivity status. Across the 3-min test, correlations between pain and blood pressure reactivity (with the effects of baseline blood pressure levels partialled out) were significant only during periods when levels of responses were relatively high. The heart rate responses were unrelated to pain ratings. Generalizability theory was applied to the analysis of temporal stability of cold pressor reactions. Both blood pressure and pain responses were highly reproducible across three sessions, appearing to express stable individual differences. The efficacy of 800 mg oral ibuprofen in controlling the cold pressor pain was also tested. Analgesic activity of the drug during the cold pressor test could not be demonstrated.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1469-8986
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine , Psychology
    Notes: The purpose of the present study was to assess changes in heart period, heart-period variance (HPV), and respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) during manipulations of the baroreceptor reflex in anesthetized cats. Hypertension, induced via phenylephrine infusion, reflexly increases parasym-pathetic activity and decreases sympathetic activity. Hypotension, produced by infusion of nitroprusside, leads to increased sympathetic activity and an inhibition of vagal influences on the heart. Specific autonomic contributions were assessed following administration of practolol, a β-adrenergic blocker, or atropine methyl nitrate.Spectral analysis was used to quantify the component of HPV associated with respiration, i.e., RSA, which is proposed to be sensitive to vagal influences on the heart. The respiratory component of HPV is described by a statistic, V̂, which is the sum of the spectral densities of the heart period spectrum across the band of frequencies associated with normal respiration.Hypertension produced an increase in V̂ which was blocked by atropine infusion, but unaltered by beta-adrenergic blockade. Hypotension decreased V̂ to near-zero values which persisted after atropine and practolol infusion. These data suggest that V̂ is determined primarily by vagal factors. Correlations between V̂ and a previously used criterion measure of vagal tone further support this hypothesis. In contrast, heart period was sensitive to vagal and sympathetic factors. Heart period increases during hypertension were abolished with atropine and heart period decreases due to hypotension were eliminated by beta-adrenergic blockade. These responses are consistent with the notion that heart period is under the control of both sympathetic and vagal factors. Since in an anesthetized preparation RSA is the major source of heart-period variability, HPV responded similarly to V̂.The results suggest that the spectral estimate of RSA, V̂, is particularly sensitive to blood pressure induced reflexive changes in vagal efferent influences on the heart. It also appears that V̂ is less influenced by sympathetic factors than heart period, a commonly used estimate of vagal activity.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1469-8986
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine , Psychology
    Notes: Hemodynamics of the cold pressor response in relation to its pain and nonpain stimulus components were investigated in normotensive college men using the foot and forehead cold pressor tasks. Mechanisms of pain- and non-pain-related increases in blood pressure were analyzed as residual effects of concurrent changes in total peripheral resistance and cardiac output. The identified partial relationships suggested that the response pattern associated with pain included positive change both in cardiac output and in total peripheral resistance, whereas the nonpain-related response was limited to an increase in total peripheral resistance. Analyses of individual differences in car-diovascular responses to pain further indicated that pain-related increments in blood pressure were mediated by a steeper rise in total peripheral resistance, an increase in heart rate, and an apparent increase in preload. At baseline, high reactors to pain manifested relatively elevated total perpheral resistance, diminished cardiac output, and an indication of a reduced inotropic state, suggesting that altered basal homeostasis may discriminate normotensive individuals displaying heightened cardiovascular reactivity to aversive cold stimulation.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1469-8986
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine , Psychology
    Notes: Steady state exercise is widely used for psychophysiological studies in which a constant heart rate at a predetermined level is desired. We have developed a microcomputer servo-controlled bicycle ergometer system that can be used for administering steady state exercise. Fourteen healthy male subjects, with a wide range of fitness levels (measured by Vo2max) were exercised to either a fixed workload (130 watts) or a predetermined heart rate level (servo-heart rate) of 122 bpm (i.e., 65% of maximum calculated heart rate for the sample). Servo-heart rate was implemented using a feedback loop that automatically adjusted workload to compensate for immediate variations in heart rate, resulting in a more consistent heart rate. Heart rate varied from the predetermined value by 17 bpm during fixed workload but only 3 bpm during servo-heart rate (p〈.05). Therefore, by using the microcomputer servo-controlled bicycle ergometer, heart rate was maintained at a predetermined level regardless of the subject's fitness level. 2max and workload during servo-heart rate were significantly correlated (r= .85, p〈.05). Therefore, the workload necessary to maintain heart rate at a constant level may provide an approximate index of aerobic fitness level.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    ISSN: 1469-8986
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine , Psychology
    Notes: Changes in heart period (HP), heart-period variance (HPV), and the respiratory component of HPV in freely moving rats were examined following pharmacological manipulations known to influence vagal control of the heart. Spectral analysis was used to quantify the component of HPV associated with respiration which is proposed to be sensitive to vagal influences on the heart. The respiratory component of HPV is described by a statistic, V̌, which is the sum of the spectral densities of the heart period spectrum across the band of frequencies associated with normal respiration. Vagal tone was reflexively enhanced by phenylephrine or peripherally blocked by atropine.Phenylephrine produced biphasic changes in HP and V̌, with the increases lasting from 0.5 to 2 hrs. Atropine resulted in significant decreases in HP, HPV and V̌. These decreases were immediate and sustained throughout the experiment, although there were signiflcant linear increases in HP and HPV from their initial post-injection values. In the saline condition, HP increased linearly across time.Results were discussed in terms of vagal and non-vagal control of the heart. It was suggested that, while all three variables are altered by manipulations of vagal influences on the heart, V̌ seems to be influenced less by non-vagal control than HP and HPV.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1469-8986
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine , Psychology
    Notes: Changes in heart period, heart period variance (HPV), and the respiratory component of HPV were examined during enhanced negative chronotropic influences on the heart produced by aortic depressor nerve (ADN) stimulation in urethane anesthetized rabbits. Spectral analysis was used to quantify the respiratory component of HPV, respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA). The statistic derived from spectral analysis which describes RSA, V̂, has been proposed to be sensitive to vagal influences on the heart. Stimulation of the ADN significantly increased V̂, heart period, and HPV. However, unlike V̂ and heart period, HPV values remained elevated following the end of stimulation. Propranolol administration did not alter the magnitude of the evoked increase in V̂, heart period, or HPV. In contrast, administration of atropine abolished the increases due to stimulation in all three measures. Heart period exhibited a monotonic relationship with stimulation current intensity. This relationship disappeared after propranolol administration suggesting sympathetic mediation. The results suggest that V̂ is sensitive to manipulations of vagal influences on the heart. In addition, V̂ often responds in a different manner from heart period and HPV.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    ISSN: 1469-8986
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine , Psychology
    Notes: A microcomputer automated system for measuring systolic time intervals is described. Electrocardiogram, phonocardiogram, and carotid pulse tracings were measured in 38 healthy male subjects during baseline conditions and during either exercise on a bicycle ergometer or a video-game task. These measurements were recorded on both a traditional 3-channel ECG recorder and the computerized system. Both methods of recording systolic time intervals were independently scored by two different experimenters. In this way, interrater reliability of hand-scoring, intermethod reliability between hand-scoring versus computer-scoring, and interrater reliability of computer-scoring could be assessed.The interrater reliabilities of hand-scored systolic time intervals were generally above .90, ranging from .73 for left ventricular ejection time to .99 for R-R intervals of the ECG, with a mean of .92. The intermethod reliability of the computer versus hand-scored systolic time intervals also proved to be generally above .90, ranging from .76 for S1-S2 components of the phonocardiogram to .99 for R-R, with a mean of .94. The interrater reliabilities of the computer-scored systolic time intervals were all above .90, ranging from .93 for S1-S2 to .99 for R-R, with a mean of .98.These data indicate that the computerized method of scoring systolic time intervals is at least as reliable as the more traditional scoring of paper tracing.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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