Abstract

Patients with heart failure (HF) are characterized by altered muscle afferent feedback which might account for their hemodynamic and autonomic reflex abnormalities. We investigated the influence of group III/IV muscle afferents on the circulatory response to rhythmic exercise in HF. Nine patients (NYHA class II) performed single leg knee extensor exercise (25/50/80% peak workload) under both control conditions (Ctrl) and with lumbar intrathecal fentanyl impairing μ‐opioid receptor‐sensitive muscle afferents. Cardiac output (Q) and femoral blood flow (QL) were determined, and arterial/venous blood samples were collected at each workload. Fentanyl had no effect at rest. During exercise, Q was 8–13% lower with Fentanyl, secondary to a 13% reduction in stroke volume and a 2–5% reduction in heart rate. Lower norepinephrine spillover during Fentanyl exercise implicated a reduced sympathetic outflow and likely accounted for the 25% increase in leg vascular conductance. As a result of this attenuated sympathoexcitation, QL was, despite a 4% lower blood pressure, 10–14% higher during exercise with Fentanyl. Although leg O2 delivery was higher during exercise with Fentanyl, arteriovenous O2 difference remained unchanged resulting in 10–17% increase in leg O2 consumption (p<0.05). Thus, although group III/IV muscle afferents represent a key determinant of the central hemodynamic response in HF, our findings also reveal that these sensory neurons cause a sympathetically‐mediated impairment of QL during rhythmic exercise in this population.

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