Abstract
Objective: Vascular tone is dictated by the net balance of vasodilatory and vasoconstrictor influences. During hypoxia, systemic sympathetic vasoconstrictor activity is increased but peripheral vasodilation prevails — suggesting vasodilatory factors outweigh sympathetically-mediated vasoconstrictor influences in the healthy state. Given vascular β-adrenergic receptors contribute to hypoxic vasodilation, we hypothesized pharmacological blockade of β-adrenergic receptors would augment the vasoconstrictor response to acute sympathetic activation during hypoxia. Methods: Thirteen young healthy participants (5F/8M, 27±7 yr, 25±3 kg/m2) completed two study visits randomized and blinded to oral placebo or propranolol (1mg/kg, NCT05256069). On each visit, participants completed two trials: 1) 10-min normoxia (0.21 FiO2, 98±0% SpO2) followed by sympathetic activation via a 2-min normoxic cold pressor test (CPT); 2) 5-min steady-state hypoxia (0.10±0.01 FiO2, 81±1% SpO2) followed by a 2-min hypoxic CPT. Forearm blood flow (FBF, venous occlusion plethysmography) and blood pressure (BP, finger photoplethysmography) were assessed. FBF was normalized for mean BP (forearm vascular conductance, FVC). A change in FVC from steady-state to the last 1-min of CPT was calculated (ΔFVC = CPT − steady-state) and expressed as a percent change (%FVC = ΔFVC/steady-state x 100). Results: The vascular response to sympathetic activation (CPT) was unaffected by hypoxia under placebo conditions (normoxia: -34±21%; hypoxia: -29±32%, p=0.33). In contrast, following β-adrenergic blockade with oral propranolol, sympathetically-mediated vasoconstriction was augmented during hypoxia (normoxia: -29±30%; hypoxia: -40±27%, p=0.04). Conclusion: β-adrenergic receptor blockade augments the vasoconstrictor response to acute sympathetic activation during hypoxia in a mixed-sex cohort. These preliminary data indicate functional β-adrenergic receptors are required to restrain sympathetically-mediated vasoconstriction during hypoxia. Based on data supporting sex-related differences in adrenergic control of vascular tone, future work will seek to stratify results by sex. Funding: AHA 909014 (DWJ), APS-SURF (BJB), HL153523 (JKL). This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2024 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.
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