Abstract: | Sympathetic β-adrenergic influences on cardiovascular responses to 50d? head-up tilt were evaluated with metoprolol (β1-blockade; 0.29 mg kg-1) and propranolol (β1 and β-2-blockade; 0.28 mg kg-1) in eight males. A normotensive-tachycardic phase was followed by a hypotensive-bradycardic episode associated with presyncopal symptoms after 23pL3 min (control, mean pLSE). Head-up tilt made thoracic electrical impedance (3.0pL10Ω), mean arterial pressure (MAP, 86pL4-93pL4 mmHg), heart rate (HR, 63pL3-99pL10 beats min-1) and total peripheral resistance (TPR, 15pL1-28pL4 mmHg min L-1) increase, while central venous oxygen saturation (74pL2-58pL4%), cardiac output (5.7pL0.1–3.1pL0.3 L min-1), stroke volume (95pL6-41pL5 mL) and pulse pressure (55pL4-49pL4 mmHg) decreased (P < 0.05). Central venous pressure decreased during head-up tilt (7pL2-0pL1 mmHg), but it remained stable during the sustained tilt. At the appearance of preswyncopal symptoms MAP (49pL3 mmHg), HR (66pL4 beats min-1) and TPR (15pL3 mmHg min L-1) decreased (P < 0.05). Neither metoprolol or propranolo changed tilt tolerance or cardiovascular variables, except for HR that remained at 57pL2 (metoprolol) and 55pL3 beats min-1 (propranolol), and MAP that remained at 87pL5 mmHg during the first phase with metoprolol. In conclusion, sympathetic activation was crucial for the heart rate elevation during normotensive head-up tilt, but not for tilt tolerance or for the associated hypotension and bradycardia. |