Abstract

This study aimed to determine whether alterations in cardiovascular dynamics before syncope are related to changes in spontaneous respiration. Fifty-two healthy subjects underwent continuous heart rate (HR), arterial blood pressure (BP), and respiratory measurements during 10-min periods of spontaneous and paced breathing (0.25 Hz) in the supine and 60 degrees head-up tilt positions. Data were evaluated by power spectrum and transfer function analyses. During tilt, 27 subjects developed syncope or presyncope and 25 remained asymptomatic. Subjects with tilt-induced syncope had significantly greater increases in low-frequency (0.04-0. 15 Hz) systolic BP, diastolic BP, and HR power during tilt than the asymptomatic subjects (P </= 0.01). This difference was present during spontaneous but not paced breathing. However, average tidal volume, respiratory rate, minute ventilation, proportion of breaths below 0.15 Hz, and low-frequency respiratory power during tilt did not differ between syncopal and nonsyncopal subjects. Transfer magnitudes between low-frequency respiration and BP, and between BP and interbeat interval, were also similar between groups. Thus vasomotor instability before syncope is not related to alterations in respiration or the cardiovagal baroreflex but may reflect oscillating central sympathetic outflow to the vasculature.

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