Objective: Central (abdominal) obesity is associated with elevated adrenergic activity and arterial blood pressure (BP). Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that transduction of spontaneous muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) to BP, that is, sympathetic transduction, is augmented in abdominal obesity (increased waist circumference) and positively related to prevailing BP.Methods: Young/middle-aged obese (32 AE 7 years; BMI: 36 AE 5 kg/m 2 , n ¼ 14) and nonobese (29 AE 10 years; BMI: 23 AE 4 kg/m 2 , n ¼ 14) without hypertension (24-h ambulatory average BP < 130/80 mmHg) were included. MSNA (microneurography) and beat-to-beat BP (finger cuff) were measured continuously and the increase in mean arterial pressure (MAP) during 15 cardiac cycles following MSNA bursts of different patterns (single, multiples) and amplitude (quartiles) was signal-averaged over a 10 min baseline period.Results: MSNA burst frequency was not significantly higher in obese vs. nonobese (21 AE 3 vs. 17 AE 3 bursts/min, P ¼ 0.34). However, resting supine BP was significantly higher in obese compared with nonobese (systolic: 127 AE 3 vs. 114 AE 3; diastolic: 76 AE 2 vs. 64 AE 1 mmHg, both P < 0.01). Importantly, obese showed greater increases in MAP following multiple MSNA bursts (P ¼ 0.02) and MSNA bursts of higher amplitude (P ¼ 0.02), but not single MSNA bursts (P ¼ 0.24), compared with nonobese when adjusting for MSNA burst frequency. The increase in MAP following higher amplitude bursts among all participants was associated with higher resting supine systolic (R ¼ 0.48; P ¼ 0.01) and diastolic (R ¼ 0.48; P ¼ 0.01) BP when controlling for MSNA burst frequency, but not when also controlling for waist circumference (P > 0.05). In contrast, sympathetic transduction was not correlated with 24-h ambulatory average BP. Conclusion:Sympathetic transduction to BP is augmented in abdominal obesity and positively related to higher resting supine BP but not 24-h ambulatory average BP.
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