» Articles » PMID: 10810784

Baroreflex Sensitivity As a New Marker for Risk Stratification

Overview
Journal Z Kardiol
Date 2000 May 16
PMID 10810784
Citations 11
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

As the arterial baroreflex importantly contributes to modulation of the autonomic influences on the heart and thereby arrhythmogenesis, baroreflex sensitivity has been used as a measure of the interaction between sympathetic and parasympathetic activities at the cardiac level. The most widely applied technique both in the experimental and clinical setting is the measurement of the heart rate slowing in response to a blood pressure rise induced by small intravenous boluses of phenylephrine. Baroreflex sensitivity is expressed as ms/mmHg and prevailing vagal reflexes are reflected by the wider R-R interval lengthening. The experimental evidence that the occurrence of ventricular fibrillation was inversely related to baroreflex sensitivity, opened the way to clinical studies. The ATRAMI (Autonomic Tone and Reflexes After Myocardial Infarction) trial has definitely demonstrated not only that a depressed baroreflex sensitivity (< 3 ms/mmHg) is a strong risk factor for cardiac death, but also that the information gained by the analysis of autonomic markers adds to the information obtained by better recognized measures of cardiovascular outcome such as left ventricular function and ventricular arrhythmias. The value of a depressed baroreflex sensitivity as a risk stratifier is meaningful in patients below age 65 in combination of a simultaneously depressed left ventricular ejection fraction. In these patients, the analysis of autonomic activity might be of value in the identification of patients who may need an implantable automatic defibrillator for primary prevention of sudden cardiac death.

Citing Articles

Influence of biological maturation on cardiac autonomic recovery in female volleyball players during & after repeated sprints training: An experimental trial.

DE Almeida-Neto P, de Oliveira F, de Oliveira-Junior J, Alves J, Rocha M, Medeiros da Silva I Sports Med Health Sci. 2024; 6(3):279-286.

PMID: 39234484 PMC: 11369838. DOI: 10.1016/j.smhs.2023.10.002.


Transcutaneous cervical vagal nerve stimulation reduces sympathetic responses to stress in posttraumatic stress disorder: A double-blind, randomized, sham controlled trial.

Gurel N, Wittbrodt M, Jung H, Shandhi M, Driggers E, Ladd S Neurobiol Stress. 2020; 13:100264.

PMID: 33344717 PMC: 7739181. DOI: 10.1016/j.ynstr.2020.100264.


Altered baroreflex sensitivity in young women with a family history of hypertension.

Matthews E, Sebzda K, Wenner M J Neurophysiol. 2019; 121(3):1011-1017.

PMID: 30673356 PMC: 6520618. DOI: 10.1152/jn.00471.2018.


An Innovative Technique to Assess Spontaneous Baroreflex Sensitivity with Short Data Segments: Multiple Trigonometric Regressive Spectral Analysis.

Li K, Rudiger H, Haase R, Ziemssen T Front Physiol. 2018; 9:10.

PMID: 29403393 PMC: 5786552. DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2018.00010.


Trigonometric regressive spectral analysis: an innovative tool for evaluating the autonomic nervous system.

Ziemssen T, Reimann M, Gasch J, Rudiger H J Neural Transm (Vienna). 2013; 120 Suppl 1:S27-33.

PMID: 23812502 DOI: 10.1007/s00702-013-1054-5.