4.6 Article

The cardiac, vasomotor, and myocardial branches of the baroreflex in fibromyalgia: Associations with pain, affective impairments, sleep problems, and fatigue

Journal

PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 58, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/psyp.13800

Keywords

anxiety; baroreflex; cardiovascular regulation; depression; fibromyalgia; pain

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities
  2. FEDER [RTI2018-095830-B-I00/AEI/10.13039/501100011033]
  3. FPU from the Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport [FPU2018-02611]

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This study examined the function of the cardiac, vasomotor, and myocardial branches of the baroreflex in fibromyalgia patients. The results showed that patients had lower baroreflex sensitivity and effectiveness compared to healthy individuals, and these measures were inversely related to clinical pain, depression, anxiety, sleep problems, and fatigue. Dysfunction in all three baroreflex branches suggests impaired autonomic regulation in fibromyalgia, which may contribute to the hyperalgesia and secondary symptoms of the disorder.
This study investigated the cardiac, vasomotor, and myocardial branches of the baroreflex in fibromyalgia using the spontaneous sequence method. Systolic blood pressure (SBP), interbeat interval (IBI), stroke volume (SV), pre-ejection period (PEP), and total peripheral resistance (TPR) were continuously recorded in 40 fibromyalgia patients and 30 healthy individuals during a cold pressor test and a mental arithmetic task. Sequences of covariation between SBP and IBI (cardiac branch), SV and PEP (myocardial branch), and TPR (vasomotor branch) were identified. Baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) was represented by the slope of the regression line between values in the sequences; baroreflex effectiveness (BEI) was indexed by the proportion of progressive SBP changes that elicited reflex responses. Patients exhibited lower BRS in the three branches, lower BEI in the cardiac and vasomotor branches, and reduced reactivity in cardiac BRS and BEI, SBP, IBI, SV, and PEP. Moreover, BRS and BEI were inversely related to clinical pain, cold pressor pain, depression, trait anxiety, sleep problems, and fatigue. Reduced function of the three baroreflex branches implies diminished resources for autonomic inotropic, chronotropic, and vascular regulation in fibromyalgia. Blunted stress reactivity indicates a limited capacity for autonomic cardiovascular adjustment to situational requirements. The associations of BRS and BEI with pain perception may reflect the antinociceptive effects arising from baroreceptor afferents, where reduced baroreflex function may contribute to the hyperalgesia characterizing fibromyalgia. The associations with affective impairments, sleep problems, and fatigue suggest that baroreflex dysfunctions are also involved in the secondary symptoms of the disorder.

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