Sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) regulates the contraction of vascular smooth muscle and leads to a change in arterial blood pressure (BP). It was observed that SNA, vascular contractility, and BP are heightened in patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD) during exercise. The exercise pressor reflex (EPR), a neural mechanism responsible for BP response to activation of muscle afferent nerve, is a determinant of the exaggerated exercise-induced BP rise in PAD. Based on recent results obtained from a series of studies in PAD patients and a rat model of PAD, this review will shed light on SNA-driven BP response and the underlying mechanisms by which receptors and molecular mediators in muscle afferent nerves mediate the abnormalities in autonomic activities of PAD. Intervention strategies, particularly non-pharmacological strategies, improving the deleterious exercise-induced SNA and BP in PAD, and enhancing tolerance and performance during exercise will also be discussed.
Keyphrases
- peripheral artery disease
- smooth muscle
- blood pressure
- high intensity
- physical activity
- randomized controlled trial
- resistance training
- heart rate
- skeletal muscle
- endothelial cells
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- heart rate variability
- hypertensive patients
- metabolic syndrome
- body composition
- adipose tissue
- single molecule