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Shifts in blood volume alter the perception of posture
Eintragsart
Autoren/Mitwirkende
- Vaitl, D. (Autor)
- Mittelstaedt, H. (Autor)
- Baisch, F. (Autor)
Titel
Shifts in blood volume alter the perception of posture
Zusammenfassung
Recent experiments have shown that somatic graviceptors exist in humans. Traditionally, extravestibular gravity information has been thought to originate from mechanoreceptors in the joints, muscles and skin. Experiments with normal, paraplegic and nephrectomized subjects revealed that the kidneys and the cardiovascular system are involved in providing truncal gravity information. The present study intends to determine the influence of shifts in body fluid, especially of the distribution of blood along the subjects' spinal (Z-) axis, on the perception of posture. To this end, the distribution of body fluids was altered by means of the technique of lower body negative and positive pressure (LBNP and LBPP). LBNP leads to venous pooling of blood in the legs, whereas LBPP prevents venous blood from pooling, increasing central volume. Changes in blood distribution were measured by segmental impedance cardiography for four body segments: the upper torso (thoracic cavity), lower torso (abdominal and pelvic region), thigh and calf. Seventeen healthy subjects (mean age: 27.3 years) participated in the experiment. They were positioned on the side (right-ear-down head position) on a tilt table which the subjects and the experimenter could tilt via remote control around an axis parallel to the subjects' visual (X-) axis. The experimenter set the initial tilt in total darkness to arbitrary angles while strictly alternating between head-up and head-down tilts. Subjects were then asked to rotate the board until they felt they were in a horizontal posture. Means and variances of eight pairs of settings were taken as a measure of the subjective horizontal posture (SHP). During LBNP (-30 mmHg), subjects perceived being tilted head-up, whereas LBPP (+30 mmHg) led them to feel tilted head-down. The results corroborate the hypothesis of an effect of the blood's mass on graviception and also indicate supplementary contributions of other visceral afferences.
Publikation
International Journal of Psychophysiology: Official Journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology
Band
27
Ausgabe
2
Seiten
99-105
Datum
1997-09
Zeitschriften-Abkürzung
Int J Psychophysiol
Sprache
eng
ISSN
0167-8760
Bibliothekskatalog
PubMed
Extra
PMID: 9342641
Link
Zitierung
Vaitl, D., Mittelstaedt, H., & Baisch, F. (1997). Shifts in blood volume alter the perception of posture. International Journal of Psychophysiology: Official Journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology, 27(2), 99–105. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0167-8760(97)00053-6
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Thema
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