4.6 Article

Respiratory modulation of human autonomic function: long-term neuroplasticity in space

期刊

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
卷 594, 期 19, 页码 5629-5646

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/JP271656

关键词

chemoreflex; baroreceptor reflex; microgravity; sympathetic nerve activity; vagus nerve

资金

  1. National Aeronautics and Space Administration [NAS0-19541, NAG2-408]
  2. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [UO1HL-56417]
  3. Centennial Foundation of Helsingin Sanomat, Finland
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [16H01649] Funding Source: KAKEN

向作者/读者索取更多资源

We studied six healthy astronauts five times, on Earth, in space on the first and 12th or 13th day of the 16 day Neurolab Space Shuttle mission, on landing day, and 5-6days later. Astronauts followed a fixed protocol comprising controlled and random frequency breathing and apnoea, conceived to perturb their autonomic function and identify changes, if any, provoked by microgravity exposure. We recorded the electrocardiogram, finger photoplethysmographic arterial pressure, tidal carbon dioxide concentrations and volumes, and peroneal nerve muscle sympathetic activity on Earth (in the supine position) and in space. (Sympathetic nerve recordings were made during three sessions: preflight, late mission and landing day.) Arterial pressure changed systematically from preflight levels: pressure fell during early microgravity exposure, rose as microgravity exposure continued, and drifted back to preflight levels after return to Earth. Vagal metrics changed in opposite directions: vagal baroreflex gain and two indices of vagal fluctuations (root mean square of successive normal R-R intervals; and proportion of successive normal R-R intervals greater than 50 ms, divided by the total number of normal R-R intervals) rose significantly during early microgravity exposure, fell as microgravity exposure continued, and descended to preflight levels upon return to Earth. Sympathetic mechanisms also changed. Burst frequencies (but not areas) during fixed frequency breathing were greater than preflight in space and on landing day, but their control during apnoea was sharply altered: astronauts increased their burst frequencies from already high levels, but they could not modulate either burst areas or frequencies appropriately. Space travel provokes long-lasting sympathetic and vagal neuroplastic changes in healthy humans.

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