Abstract

We compared autonomic regulation of the heart in Wistar rats with acute exogenous hypoxic and chronic normobaric hypoxia against the background of experimental chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. In animals subjected to normobaric hypoxia, dysfunction of the autonomic regulation of the heart developed; it manifested in a significant limitation of the effects of the parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous systems on the pacemaker activity of the sinoatrial node. Disturbances in autonomic regulation of the heart in acute exogenous hypoxic normobaric hypoxia were characterized by "rigid" heart rhythm and bradycardia in the presence of systolic-diastolic arterial hypotension. Centralization of heart rhythm control did not provide compensation for hemodynamic disturbances. In case of chronic normobaric hypoxia, an increase in arterial hypoxemia was associated with protective "denervation" of the heart against the background of increased activity of the humoral regulation, which manifested in tachycardia, isolated systolic arterial hypertension, and overstrain of regulatory systems.

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