Exercise for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention and Treatment From Molecular to Clinical, Part 1

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benefits opening the possibility for its usage in the clinical practice. For instance,


clinical studies demonstrated that central autonomic adaptations induced by aerobic


training are the main cause of baroreflex sensitivity improvement in hypertensive


patients [ 1 ]. Indeed, experimental studies in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR)


identified that normalization of baroreflex function and improvement of cardiac


vagal activity are timely correlated with both the downregulation of brain renin-


angiotensin system and the reduction of oxidative stress and inflammatory profile in


autonomic control areas [ 2 , 3 ]. The present chapter, reviewing these data and others


focused in the cross-talking between tissue dysfunction and molecular/cellular


responses, allows the physical training prescribers to understand the physiological


mechanisms that attenuate autonomic dysfunction and how the improvement of


autonomic regulation contributes to a better circulatory control in hypertension.


2 Central Nervous System and Autonomic Dysfunction


in Hypertension


Directly coupled to cardiovascular system, central nervous system drives both acute


and chronic hemodynamic adjustments during distinct environmental conditions.


For this purpose, the brain continuously monitors the cardiovascular parameters and


integrates these signals in order to reflexly codify cardiovascular and metabolic


parameters through the sympathetic and parasympathetic divisions of the autonomic


nervous system. There are three major sets for afferent signaling of cardiovascular


parameters: arterial baroreceptors, peripheral chemoreceptors and cardiopulmonary


receptors. These intrinsic receptors of the cardiovascular system codify pressure


levels, circulating blood gases and cardiac function, respectively, whose signals are


integrated in central autonomic areas, triggering appropriate parasympathetic and


sympathetic outflow to heart and vessels [ 4 , 5 ]. In hypertension, peripheral signal-


ing mainly by baroreceptors and chemoreceptors are dysfunctional and central inte-


grative autonomic mechanisms are abnormal, contributing to increased sympathetic


nerve activity and suppressed parasympathetic nerve activity, which characterizes


the concept of autonomic dysfunction [ 6 – 8 ].


Baroreflex is recognized as the most important beat-to-beat regulatory mecha-

nism of arterial pressure. Baroreceptors are located in the adventitial and media


tunica of aortic arch and carotid sinus. These mechanoreceptors present channels of


Degenerin/Epithelial Na + channel, Acid sensing ion channel 2 [ 9 ], and transient


receptor potential cations channels superfamilies, as the transient receptor potential


channel 5 [ 10 ]. Once the pressure wave strains the vascular wall in the aortic arch


and carotid sinus, the baroreceptors are stretched and the mechanosensitive chan-


nels induce a cationic influx, which depolarizes Na + channels and increases aortic


depressor nerve activity. In the brainstem, second order neurons located at nucleus


tractus solitarii (NTS) are stimulated, activating parasympathetic areas, as the nucleus


ambiguus (NA) and the dorsal nucleus of vagus nerve (DMV) [ 4 ]. Also, these


G.S. Masson and L.C. Michelini
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