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Cardiovascular Response to Coughing: Its Value in the Assessment of Autonomic Nervous Control

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1. The relationship between blood pressure and heart rate responses to coughing was investigated in 10 healthy subjects in three body positions and compared with the circulatory responses to commonly used autonomic function tests: forced breathing, standing up and the Valsalva manoeuvre. 2. We observed a concomitant intra-cough increase in supine heart rate and blood pressure and a sustained post-cough elevation of heart rate in the absence of arterial hypotension. These findings indicate that the sustained increase in heart rate in response to coughing is not caused by arterial hypotension and that these heart rate changes are not under arterial baroreflex control. 3. The maximal change in heart rate in response to coughing (28 ± 8 beats/min) was comparable with the response to forced breathing (29 ± 9 beats/min, P > 0.4), with a reasonable correlation (r = 0.67, P < 0.05), and smaller than the change in response to standing up (41 ± 9 beats/min, P < 0.01) and to the Valsalva manoeuvre (39 ± 13 beats/min, P < 0.01). 4. Quantifying the initial heart rate response to coughing offers no advantage in measuring cardiac acceleratory capacity; standing up and the Valsalva manoeuvre are superior to coughing in evaluating arterial baroreflex cardiovascular function.
Title: Cardiovascular Response to Coughing: Its Value in the Assessment of Autonomic Nervous Control
Description:
1.
The relationship between blood pressure and heart rate responses to coughing was investigated in 10 healthy subjects in three body positions and compared with the circulatory responses to commonly used autonomic function tests: forced breathing, standing up and the Valsalva manoeuvre.
2.
We observed a concomitant intra-cough increase in supine heart rate and blood pressure and a sustained post-cough elevation of heart rate in the absence of arterial hypotension.
These findings indicate that the sustained increase in heart rate in response to coughing is not caused by arterial hypotension and that these heart rate changes are not under arterial baroreflex control.
3.
The maximal change in heart rate in response to coughing (28 ± 8 beats/min) was comparable with the response to forced breathing (29 ± 9 beats/min, P > 0.
4), with a reasonable correlation (r = 0.
67, P < 0.
05), and smaller than the change in response to standing up (41 ± 9 beats/min, P < 0.
01) and to the Valsalva manoeuvre (39 ± 13 beats/min, P < 0.
01).
4.
Quantifying the initial heart rate response to coughing offers no advantage in measuring cardiac acceleratory capacity; standing up and the Valsalva manoeuvre are superior to coughing in evaluating arterial baroreflex cardiovascular function.

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