Abstract

Blood pressure regulation is a prime example of homeostatic regulation. However, some characteristics of the cardiovascular system better match a non-linear self-organized system than a homeostatic one. To determine whether blood pressure regulation is self-organized, we repeated the seminal demonstration of self-organized control of movement, but applied it to the cardiovascular system. We looked for two distinctive features peculiar to self-organization: non-equilibrium phase transitions and hysteresis in their occurrence when the system is challenged. We challenged the cardiovascular system by means of slow, 20-min Tilt-Up and Tilt-Down tilt table tests in random order. We continuously determined the phase between oscillations at the breathing frequency of Total Peripheral Resistances and Heart Rate Variability by means of cross-spectral analysis. We looked for a significant phase drift during these procedures, which signed a non-equilibrium phase transition. We determined at which head-up tilt angle it occurred. We checked that this angle was significantly different between Tilt-Up and Tilt-Down to demonstrate hysteresis. We observed a significant non-equilibrium phase transition in nine healthy volunteers out of 11 with significant hysteresis (48.1 ± 7.5° and 21.8 ± 3.9° during Tilt-Up and Tilt-Down, respectively, p < 0.05). Our study shows experimental evidence of self-organized short-term blood pressure regulation. It provides new insights into blood pressure regulation and its related disorders.

Highlights

  • Short-term blood pressure control by means of the baroreflex is a prime example of a homeostatic model in which a biological variable is maintained at its normal value by means of a physiological regulatory mechanism (Kamiya et al, 2014)

  • We experimentally looked for phase transitions and hysteresis between two variables linked to two effectors of the cardiovascular system while we altered system demand by means of changes of position

  • The three remaining subjects among these nine presented a non-equilibrium phase transition during only one procedure out of the two indicating an extreme hysteresis that occurred outside the x-scale in one of the procedures (Figure 5B)

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Summary

Introduction

Short-term blood pressure control by means of the baroreflex is a prime example of a homeostatic model in which a biological variable is maintained at its normal value by means of a physiological regulatory mechanism (Kamiya et al, 2014). Blood pressure drifts, such as those caused by blood volume shifts arising with the standing position, are compensated heart beat after heart beat by the baroreflex (Rowell, 1993). The homeostatic model is based on causal relationships that draw a (curvi-) linear link between blood pressure and heart rate (Parlow et al, 1995).

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