首页   按字顺浏览 期刊浏览 卷期浏览 Role of Impaired Lower-Limb Venous Innervation in the Pathogenesis of the Chronic Fatig...
Role of Impaired Lower-Limb Venous Innervation in the Pathogenesis of the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

 

作者: David P. Streeten,  

 

期刊: The American Journal of the Medical Sciences  (OVID Available online 2001)
卷期: Volume 321, issue 3  

页码: 163-167

 

ISSN:0002-9629

 

年代: 2001

 

出版商: OVID

 

关键词: Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS);Venous tone;Pedal venous compliance;Pedal venous contractility.

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

BackgroundIn patients with acute orthostatic hypotension, there is excessive pooling of blood in the legs, which may result from the strikingly subnormal compliance that is demonstrable in the pedal veins during norepinephrine infusion. The common occurrence of delayed orthostatic hypotension and/or tachycardia in the chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) led to the present studies of foot vein compliance in CFS patients with a linear variable differential transformer.MethodsSeven patients with CFS were compared with 7 age- and gender matched healthy control subjects in their blood pressure, heart-rate, and plasma norepinephrine responses to prolonged standing and in measurements of their foot vein contractile responses to intravenous norepinephrine infusions with the linear variable differential transformer.ResultsExcessive, delayed (usually after 10 min) orthostatic reductions in systolic and diastolic blood pressure (P< 0.01) and inconsistently excessive increases in heart rate were found in the CFS patients, in whom venous compliance in response to infused norepinephrine was significantly reduced (P< 0.05).ConclusionsIn these patients with CFS, delayed orthostatic hypotension was clearly demonstrable, and, as in previously reported patients with orthostatic hypotension of acute onset, this was associated with reduced pedal vein compliance during norepinephrine infusion, implying impaired sympathetic innervation of foot veins. The rapid symptomatic improvement demonstrated in previous studies of CFS patients during correction of orthostatic venous pooling by inflation of military antishock trousers (MAST) to 35 mm Hg may suggest that excessive lower body venous pooling, perhaps by reducing cerebral perfusion, is involved in the orthostatic component of fatigue in these patients.

 

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