Reduced heart rate variability (HRV) and delayed blood pressure recovery are associated with increased cardiovascular risk. Besides this evident link, the vagus is thought to play an inhibitory role in the regulation of other allostatic systems, including inflammation and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. However, human evidence is scarce. To further explore these associations and with special regard to the postulated mediating role of the vagus, we hypothesised that subjects with low vagal tone as indexed by reduced resting HRV would show impaired post-stress recovery of cardiovascular, endocrine and immune system markers involved in cardiovascular pathology. 44 healthy men underwent a standardised mental stress test. Besides continuous measurement of systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP, DBP), heart rate (HR), and HRV serum cortisol, tumour necrosis factoralpha (TNF-alpha), and interleukin-6 (IL-6) were measured before, after, 20, and 60 min after stress. Low versus high HRV groups was defined by median split on resting HRV (RMSSD). The task elicited significant time effects for SBP, DBP, HR, HRV, cortisol, and TNF-alpha. Subjects with low baseline HRV showed almost no modulation of HRV coupled with overall reduced HRV levels, and impaired recovery of DBP, cortisol, and TNF-alpha. Confirming our hypothesis, low vagal tone was associated with impaired recovery of cardiovascular, endocrine, and immune markers in healthy males. The data support an inhibitory role of the vagus in the regulation of allostatic systems as described in the neurovisceral integration model. We posit reduced resting HRV as a risk marker for future cardiovascular and other stress-related disease.
Salt sensitivity (SS) represents a risk factor for essential hypertension, which has been related to enhanced cardiovascular stress reactivity possibly mediated by increased noradrenergic susceptibility. We investigated biophysiological responses to mental stress in salt-sensitive (ss) and salt-resistant (sr) subjects, hypothesizing lower heart rate variability (HRV) and higher cortisol in the ss. A total of 48 healthy normotensive Caucasian men (age 25.6±2.6, body mass index 22.9±2.3) were phenotyped for SS (defined as significant drop in mean arterial pressure43 mm Hg under the low-salt diet) by a 2-week high-versus low-salt diet. Subjects underwent a standardized mental stress task with continuous cardiovascular monitoring before, during and after the test (Finapres; Ohmeda, Louisville, CO, USA). Blood samples were drawn to examine cortisol and catecholamines before, after and 20 min after stress. The task elicited significant increases of systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic BP (DBP) and heart rate (HR) and a significant decrease of HRV (all time effects Po0.0001). The ss subjects showed lower norepinephrine (NE) and higher cortisol, indicated by significant group effects (P ¼ 0.009 and 0.025, respectively). HR increased and HRV decreased more in the ss under the stress, shown by significant time by group interactions (P ¼ 0.045 and 0.003, respectively). The observation of a more pronounced HR rise coupled with a greater decrease of HRV in healthy ss men under the influence of brief mental stress confirms their enhanced physiological stress reactivity. The lower peripheral NE may represent an effort to compensate for increased noradrenergic receptor sensitivity. The enhanced cortisol levels are backed by recent genetic findings on HSD11B2 polymorphisms and may promote hypertension.
Research suggests equivocal findings on associations of catecholamines and mood. Our study investigated the associations of emotional state, blood pressure and catecholamines in 55 healthy males undergoing mental stress. We especially checked the reported link between norepinephrine (NE) and emotional irritation. Blood pressure (SBP, DBP) and heart rate (HR) were continuously monitored. NE and epinephrine (EPI) were measured before, after, and 20 minutes after stress. Participants were divided into irritated versus non-irritated and anxious versus non-anxious subjects by median split on their baseline questionnaires. The task elicited significant cardiovascular, hormonal, and psychological stress responses. NE levels were significantly correlated with irritation before stress. Irritated subjects showed significantly higher DBP and NE than non-irritated subjects. The higher NE and DBP levels in the irritated participants suggest detrimental psycho-physiological interrelations promoting the development of stress-mediated cardiovascular diseases. Heightened emotional irritation before stress may be regarded as a psychological risk factor.
Low-anxiety subjects were characterized by a higher degree of salt sensitivity and increased autonomic responsiveness. Defensiveness was also shown to be elevated in this group and might be the underlying psychological trait explaining these findings. Future research on the associations of anxiety and cardiovascular risk should implement measurement of defensiveness in order to identify these subjects at potential risk for cardiovascular disease despite self-reports of low anxiety.
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