Abstract
Syncope which occurs suddenly in the setting of recovery from exercise, known as post-exercise syncope, represents a failure of integrative physiology during recovery from exercise. We estimate that between 50 and 80% of healthy individuals will develop pre-syncopal signs and symptoms if subjected to a 15-min head-up tilt following exercise. Post-exercise syncope is most often neurally mediated syncope during recovery from exercise, with a combination of factors associated with post-exercise hypotension and loss of the muscle pump contributing to the onset of the event. One can consider the initiating reduction in blood pressure as the tip of the proverbial iceberg. What is needed is a clear model of what lies under the surface; a model that puts the observational variations in context and provides a rational framework for developing strategic physical or pharmacological countermeasures to ultimately protect cerebral perfusion and avert loss of consciousness. This review summarizes the current mechanistic understanding of post-exercise syncope and attempts to categorize the variation of the physiological processes that arise in multiple exercise settings. Newer investigations into the basic integrative physiology of recovery from exercise provide insight into the mechanisms and potential interventions that could be developed as countermeasures against post-exercise syncope. While physical counter maneuvers designed to engage the muscle pump and augment venous return are often found to be beneficial in preventing a significant drop in blood pressure after exercise, countermeasures that target the respiratory pump and pharmacological countermeasures based on the involvement of histamine receptors show promise.
Keywords: Syncope, vasovagal, Post-exercise hypotension, Tilt-table test, Hypotension, Orthostatic, Regional Blood Flow, Exercise, Recovery, Receptors, Histamine, Baroreflex, Sympathetic Nervous System, Athletic Performance
INTRODUCTION
Post-exercise syncope can be defined as loss of consciousness or development of pre-syncopal signs and symptoms during recovery from a bout of physical activity or exercise. It is an alarming response to exercise which can occur in apparently healthy individuals, including athletes, or in individuals with autonomic disorders, and represents a failure of integrative physiology in the setting of recovery from exercise. It is associated with regulated reductions in blood pressure known as post-exercise hypotension, which can be large enough in magnitude to become symptomatic (Kenny & Seals, 1993; Halliwill, 2001; Halliwill et al., 2013). However, most reports of post-exercise syncope are likely to be incidents of neurally mediated syncope (formally called vasovagal syncope) (Freeman et al., 2011) that have occurred during recovery from exercise, with the underlying changes associated with post-exercise hypotension contributing to the onset of the event (Kosinski et al., 2000; Krediet et al., 2004; O’Connor et al., 2009).
Several case studies of individuals who have reportedly fainted following physical activity have been examined, yet the physiology remains poorly understood (see Table 1 below for an extensive listing). Important from these case studies is the recognition that cessation of exercise is a key step in the cascade leading to neurally mediated syncope in healthy individuals (Krediet et al., 2004), whereas hypotension during exercise is more likely to occur in individuals with autonomic disorders (Low et al., 2012). Characteristically, post-exercise syncopal events occur when an individual is standing motionless during the first 5 to 10 min after exercise (Krediet et al., 2004), at time when the muscle pump (with its implicit role of maintaining central venous pressure during exercise in the upright position) is no longer engaged.
TABLE 1. COMPILATION OF CASE REPORTS ON POST-EXERCISE SYNCOPE.
Case reports and case series in which pre-syncope or syncope developed during recovery from exercise. Excluded were cases of syncope that occurred during exercise, rather than post-exercise. Clinical tests show the variety of exercise tests subjects underwent to evaluate syncopal episodes.
Reference | Age | Sex | History | Clinic test | Onset time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Eichna et al., 1947b | 22 | Male | Syncope while standing after performance of the Harvard Pack Test | Harvard Pack Test | 3 min post-exercise |
Schlesinger, 1973 | 35 | Male | Pre-syncopal episodes with prolonged standing | 6 min cycling @ 100 watts | Immediately after cessation of exercise |
Tsutsumi et al., 1979 | 48 | Male | History of syncopal episodes after exercise [running] | Master’s augmented 2-step test | Immediately after cessation of exercise |
Fleg & Asante, 1983 | 52 | Male | Pre-syncopal episode after maximal exercise; brief history of mild hypertension | Graded maximal treadmill test [Balke protocol] | 10 min post- exercise |
Hirata et al., 1987 | 29 | Male | 6 episodes of syncope after strenuous exercise over last 18 years | Stair-stepping exercise test | Immediately after cessation of exercise |
Huycke et al., 1987 | 22 | Male | Syncopal episode several seconds after maximal exertion [cycling uphill] | Graded maximal treadmill test [Bruce protocol] | Immediately after cessation of exercise |
Kapoor, 1989 | 34 | Male | 2 syncopal episodes after exercise | Graded maximal treadmill test [Bruce protocol] | Immediately after cessation of exercise |
Pedersen et al., 1989 | 29 | Male | No history of syncope | Graded maximal treadmill test [Bruce protocol] | 3 min post-exercise |
Tamura et al., 1990 | 45 | Male | Recurrent syncopal episodes after strenuous exercise [rope skipping] | Graded maximal treadmill test [Bruce protocol] | 1 min post-exercise |
Arad et al., 1993 | 36 | Male | Hypertension and syncope after a graded maximal cycle test | Graded maximal cycle test | 2 min after cessation of exercise |
Ueyama et al., 1994 | 62 | Male | Two episodes of syncope after exertion; history of hypertension; 50 mg atenolol daily | Graded maximal treadmill test | 1 min post-exercise |
Osswald et al., 1994 | 34 | Male | Recurrent syncopal and pre-syncopal episodes after weight lifting | Submaximal exercise test | 2 min post-exercise |
Osswald et al., 1994 | 22 | Male | Four syncopal episodes during or after playing basketball | Maximal exercise test | 1 min post-exercise |
Osswald et al., 1994 | 35 | Male | Two pre-syncopal episodes after strenuous exercise and after fighting a fire | Undescribed exercise test | 8 min post-exercise [seated] |
Tse & Lau, 1995 | 41 | Male | Three syncopal episodes associated with abdominal pain or micturition | Graded maximal treadmill test [Bruce protocol] | 4 min post-exercise |
van den Berg et al., 1995 | 37 | Male | Recurrent syncopal episodes after exercise | Graded maximal cycle test | 6 min post-exercise [during active recovery] |
van den Berg et al., 1995 | 36 | Male | Prolonged asystole and syncopal episode after a graded maximal exercise test | Graded maximal cycle test | 4 min post-exercise [during active recovery] |
Crisafulli et al., 2000 | 18 | Male | Syncopal episode after a graded maximal cycle test | Graded maximal cycle test | Immediately after cessation of active recovery |
Lowe et al., 2000 | 29 | Male | Syncopal episode after strenuous physical activity; two pre-syncopal episodes after sexual activity. | Graded maximal treadmill test [Bruce protocol] | 1 min post-exercise |
Thijs et al., 2003 | 20 | Male | Recurrent syncopal and pre-syncopal episodes after exercise | Cycle exercise | Immediately after cessation of exercise |
Ziegelstein, 2004 | 72 | Male | Recurrent pre-syncopal episodes after exercise | n/a | n/a |
Krediet et al., 2005 | 27 | Female | Recurrent syncopal and pre-syncopal episodes during exercise and sexual activity | Graded maximal cycle test | During maximal or immediately after cessation of exercise |
Krediet et al., 2006 | 28 | Male | Syncopal episode after a graded maximal cycle test | Graded maximal cycle test | 3 min post-exercise |
Dockery & Newman, 2007 | 40 | Male | Syncopal episode after playing basketball; four pre- syncopal episodes after exercise | Graded maximal treadmill test [Bruce protocol] | 30 s post-exercise |
Karadag et al., 2007 | 44 | Male | History of syncope and chest pain | Graded maximal treadmill test [Bruce protocol] | 2 min post-exercise |
Karadag et al., 2007 | 41 | Male | Bodybuilder with recurrent syncopal and pre-syncopal episodes associated with strenuous exercise | Graded maximal treadmill test [Bruce protocol] | 3 min post-exercise |
Karadag et al., 2007 | 44 | Male | Atypical chest pain with no history of syncope | Graded maximal treadmill test [Bruce protocol] | 4 min post-exercise |
Prior work on “the postural problem” had suggested a key role of postural muscles (activated tonically to offset gravity and rhythmically during postural sway) in aiding venous return to the heart during quiet standing, as highlighted by Amberson (1943). However, it was classic studies in the 1940’s (Hellebrandt & Franseen, 1943; Pollack & Wood, 1949; Hellebrandt & Cary, 1949; Barcroft & Dornhorst, 1949) that coined the term “muscle pump” and demonstrated the profound power of skeletal muscle contractions to reduce both venous pressure and blood volume within the dependent exercising limbs, as well as the rapidity with which this beneficial effect of skeletal muscle contraction is lost when transitioning from exercise to quiet standing. Figure 1 illustrates some of these classic demonstrations. Indeed, this early work, as well as studies by Stegall (1966), show that rhythmic muscle contractions in the dependent limbs are capable of moving blood toward the heart against significant pressure gradients (i.e., greater than 90 mmHg) so long as venous valves are competent.
FIGURE 1.
Early observations of the muscle pump. Panel A: Changes in calf volume with muscle contraction as measured by plethysmography. E denotes the onset of exercise (plantar flexion at 1 Hz for 10 s); R denotes onset of rest; CP denotes inflation of a cuff above the knee to 90 mmHg for remainder of tracing. This early study shows the considerable volume of blood that can be mobilized from the calf in response to modest muscle contractions, as well as showing that the muscle pump is capable of moving blood against a considerable pressure gradient. (Reproduced from Barcroft & Dornhorst, 1949). Panel B: Changes in saphenous vein pressure with walking on a treadmill at 1.7 mph. Step-by-step changes in minimum and maximum vein pressure at the level of the ankle during quiet standing (control), slow walking, and quiet standing after walking. This early study shows that dependent limb venous pressure can be markedly reduced within a few steps by engagement of the muscle pump, as well as the rate at which venous pressure will return that that predicted by gravitational forces when muscle pump activity ceases. (Reproduced from Pollack & Wood, 1949).
Thus, with quiet standing after exercise, one can anticipate a significant rise in dependent limb venous pressure and blood volumes, and a consequent fall in venous return to the heart, when this second generator of forward blood flow is switched off. This shift in blood volume, along with sustained post-exercise vasodilation and other responses associated with post-exercise hypotension, set the stage for syncope in individuals who attempt to remain stationary and upright. Along these lines, we estimate that between 50 and 80% of healthy individuals will develop pre-syncopal signs and symptoms if they are subjected to a head-up tilt for 15 minutes following a range of exercise activities (see table 2 below). This is markedly higher than the incidence of ~ 8% pre-syncope during similar head-up tilt in the general population (Kosinski & Grubb, 1994; Natale et al., 1995)
TABLE 2. COMPILATION OF PROSPECTIVE STUDIES ON POST-EXERCISE SYNCOPE.
Prospective studies in which pre-syncopal rates during head-up tilt or tolerance to lower body negative pressure were assessed during recovery from exercise.
Reference | Exercise | Environment | Incidence |
---|---|---|---|
1 Moderate-intensity exercise | |||
Mayerson, 1944 | 10 min cycling @ 45 w | 24 to 32°C | 54% pre-syncopal; 60 to 75 head-up tilt [15 min] |
Gratze et al., 2008 | 42.2 km marathon | 20°C, 78% humidity | 27% pre-syncopal; active standing [6 min] |
Privett et al., 2010a | 42.2 km marathon | 10 to 11°C, light rain | 10% pre-syncopal; active standing [3 min] |
Murrell et al., 2009 | 4.5 h running @ 70–80% maximal heart rate | 15°C, 72% humidity | 81% pre-syncopal; 60 head-up tilt [15 min] |
Eichna et al., 1947a | 51.5 km hike with pack | “Moderately warm” | 54% pre-syncopal; 70 head-up tilt [5 min] |
Holtzhausen & Noakes, 1995 | 80 km ultra-marathon | 14 to 25°C, 44 to 24% humidity | 23% pre-syncopal; active standing [10 min] |
2 High-intensity exercise | |||
Brogdon & Hellebrandt, 1940 | Brief “violent” exercise | n/a | 2 out of 3 pre-syncopal; active standing |
Eichna et al., 1947a | Maximal exercise for up to 5 min | 23°C | 58% pre-syncopal; 70 head-up tilt [5 min] |
Bjurstedt et al., 1983 | Graded maximal cycle test | 21°C | 83% pre-syncopal; 70 head-up tilt [6 min] |
Privett et al., 2010b | Graded maximal treadmill test | 23°C | 100% pre-syncopal; active standing [10 min] |
Lacewell et al., 2013 | Supra-maximal exercise for 1 min [modified Wingate test] | 23°C, 40% humidity | 58% pre-syncopal; 60 head-up tilt [15 min] |
3 Exercise in the heat | |||
Luft et al., 1976 | 2 h intermittent cycling @ 30% VO2max | 50°C, 15% humidity | Lower body negative pressure tolerance was reduced 31% |
Shvartz et al., 1977 | 3 h bench stepping @ 40 w | 39°C, 50% humidity | 46% pre-syncopal; leaning upright against wall [20 min] |
McCord et al., 2008 | 45 min running @ 50% VO2max | 35°C, 30% humidity | 53% pre-syncopal; 60 head-up tilt [15 min] |
4 Exercise at altitude - No prospective studies | |||
5 Resistance exercise - No prospective studies |
This topic was last explored from a mechanistic or integrative physiology perspective a decade ago (Kosinski et al., 2000; Halliwill, 2001; Krediet et al., 2004), but has been reviewed from a clinical assessment perspective in more recent years (Link & Estes, 2007; O’Connor et al., 2009; Asplund et al., 2011; Hastings & Levine, 2012). We believe that recent investigations into the basic integrative physiology of recovery from exercise provide new insight into the mechanisms (Halliwill et al., 2013) and potential interventions (Lacewell et al., 2013) that could be developed as countermeasures against post-exercise syncope.
One can consider the reduction in blood pressure associated with post-exercise hypotension and syncope as the tip of the proverbial iceberg. What we have endeavored to create is a clear model of what lies under the surface; a model that puts the observational variations in context and provides a rational framework for developing strategic physical or pharmacological countermeasures. Part one of this review summarizes the current understanding of the mechanisms that contribute to post-exercise hypotension and syncope in humans. Part two of this review explores and attempts to categorize the variations on these physiological processes that arise in the settings of 1) moderate-intensity exercise, 2) high-intensity exercise, 3) exercise in the heat, 4) exercise at altitude, and 5) resistance exercise. Part three of this review explores and attempts to categorize targets of intervention including physical and pharmacological countermeasures against post-exercise syncope.
PART 1: REVIEW OF THE MECHANISMS UNDERLYING POST-EXERCISE HYPOTENSION AND SYNCOPE
The observation that “arterial pressure becomes depressed below normal resting pressure after severe muscular work” (Hill, 1898) is nearly as old as the sphygmomanometer itself. There are two distinct phenomena to consider in this context. Post-exercise hypotension represents a well-regulated reduction in arterial pressure lasting several hours following a single bout of exercise. It is well-regulated in that the hemodynamic state is stable, the reduction in pressure is similar in magnitude whether the individual is studied upright or supine, and it is driven by modest quantitative changes in autonomic control of arterial pressure. In contrast, post-exercise syncope represents a failure of the normal regulation of pressure and or cerebral perfusion such that symptoms develop which are syncopal in nature. It is an unstable hemodynamic state in which there is either a failure to compensate for symptomatic hypotension or in which a qualitative change in autonomic control of arterial pressure results in paradoxical vasodilatory and bradycardic responses. With a basic definition of these two phenomena, let us explore the known mechanisms which link them to recovery from exercise.
As recently reviewed (Halliwill et al., 2013), the hemodynamic patterns most readily observed following exercise (e.g., reduced blood pressure, increased heart rate) are part of a larger pattern of hemodynamic responses and underlying mechanisms. Work over the last few years has generated a number of important mechanistic insights into post-exercise hypotension and identified the related phenomenon of sustained post-exercise vasodilation and its primary cause. During the exercise recovery period, the combination of centrally mediated decreases in sympathetic nerve activity, in addition to a reduced signal transduction from sympathetic nerve activation into vasoconstriction, and local vasodilator mechanisms contribute to the fall in arterial blood pressure seen after exercise, which in some cases may contribute to the development of pre-syncopal signs or symptoms.
Post-exercise baroreflex resetting and blunted transduction
After exercise, the arterial baroreflex is reset to defend lower blood pressures in humans (Halliwill et al., 1996) and in rats (Kajekar et al., 2002; Miki et al., 2003), resulting in reduced sympathetic outflow (Floras et al., 1989; Halliwill et al., 1996; Kulics et al., 1999; Kajekar et al., 2002; Miki et al., 2003). In this discussion, baroreflex resetting is used to indicate a shift in the operating point of the baroreceptor reflex in absence of any change in gain or sensitivity of the control of sympathetic outflow. In humans, the sensitivity of baroreflex control of sympathetic outflow is unaltered during post-exercise resetting (Halliwill et al., 1996) but it appears blunted in rats (Kajekar et al., 2002; Miki et al., 2003). Baroreflex control of heart rate has proven to be more variable in its response to exercise, perhaps due to differences in methodology, idiosyncrasies resulting from the dual autonomic control of the heart, or thermal influences on heart rate. The current model for the mechanism of post-exercise baroreflex resetting is based on studies conducted by Chen and colleagues (reviewed in Chen & Bonham, 2010), in which muscle afferents to the nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS) provide the key modulation of sympathetic output from the cardiovascular control centers in the medulla. In brief, muscle afferents activated in response to muscle contraction release substance-P at neurokinin-1 receptors on GABAergic interneurons in the caudal (NTS). These GABAergic interneurons inhibit 2nd order barosensitive neurons within the NTS which convey information from baroreceptor afferents to the caudal ventrolateral medulla. GABA reduces their excitability, resulting in less inhibition of sympathetic neurons in the rostral medulla, greater firing of sympathetic vasoconstrictor neurons during exercise, and resetting of the baroreflex to higher pressures during exercise. As exercise continues, neurokinin-1 receptors internalize on the GABA interneuron so that after exercise, neurokinin-1 receptors are less available for binding (Chen et al., 2009). As a result, the GABAergic interneurons exert less inhibitory influence on the 2nd order barosensitive neurons, leading to an overall decrease in sympathetic outflow from the rostral ventrolateral medulla after exercise. When neurokinin-1 receptors are blocked prior to exercise, post-exercise hypotension is attenuated (Chen et al., 2002). Likewise, GABAa receptor antagonism in the rostral ventrolateral medulla prevents post-exercise hypotension (Kajekar et al., 2002).
In young healthy humans exercised in thermoneutral conditions, neither the splanchnic nor renal vasculatures demonstrate changes in vascular conductance from resting pre-exercise levels to post-exercise recovery (although both vasoconstrict during exercise). This is an interesting contrast to the well known vasoconstriction that occurs in these vascular beds in response to hypotension in general, and has been interpreted to be another representation of the central resetting of the arterial baroreflex (Pricher et al., 2004). Hence, these vascular beds do not directly contribute to post-exercise hypotension, yet they do not attenuate it. Likewise, cutaneous vascular conductance quickly returns to pre-exercise levels despite continued elevations in body core temperature (Wilkins et al., 2004). This appears to be an expression of a shift in threshold of the thermoreflexes which allow core temperature to remain higher during recovery from exercise.
In addition to the sympathoinhibition that results from baroreflex resetting, post-exercise hypotension is associated with a blunted transduction of sympathetic outflow into vasoconstriction. For comparable levels of muscle sympathetic nerve activity, there is a reduced vascular resistance after exercise in the previously active skeletal muscles (Halliwill et al., 1996). It is unlikely that a post-junctional mechanism is responsible for this blunted sensitivity to sympathetic outflow, as both α1- and α2-adrenergic responsiveness remain intact following exercise (Halliwill et al., 2003). Presynaptic inhibition of norepinephrine release or increased reuptake of norepinephrine are possible explanations for the blunted transduction.
Post-exercise Vasodilation
There are two recognized vasodilatory phenomena during recovery from exercise: 1) immediate post-exercise hyperemia, and 2) sustained post-exercise vasodilation of the previously active skeletal muscle vascular beds (Laughlin et al., 2012). The immediate post-exercise hyperemia can last from several seconds up to 20 min. The magnitude and duration of the hyperemia is dependent on the time, type, and intensity of exercise, but is not fully explained by mechanisms related to oxygen consumption within the previously active skeletal muscle (Morganroth et al., 1975; Bangsbo & Hellsten, 1998). It has been suggested that the same vasodilator signals that drive exercise hyperemia contribute to immediate post-exercise hyperemia (Bangsbo & Hellsten, 1998; Halliwill et al., 2013), but there is no consensus on its cause which is likely to be multi-factorial.
In contrast to the short-lived immediate post-exercise hyperemia, sustained post-exercise vasodilation typically lasts upwards of two hours following moderate intensity aerobic exercise. It is dependent on the activation of histamine H1- and H2-receptors, as combined H1- and H2-receptor antagonism reduces post-exercise vasodilation by ~ 80% following 60 min of moderate-intensity cycle ergometry in both sedentary and endurance-trained athletes (Lockwood et al., 2005; McCord & Halliwill, 2006; McCord et al., 2006). Further, sustained post-exercise vasodilation following 60 min of moderate-intensity unilateral dynamic knee-extension exercise is abolished by H1- and H2-receptor antagonism (Barrett-O’Keefe et al., 2013). Several possible mechanisms may increase intramuscular histamine during recovery from exercise. Mast cells located within the connective tissue layer surrounding skeletal muscle fascicles or near blood vessels may degranulate, releasing histamine locally (Metcalfe et al., 1997). Exercise-related factors that have been associated with mast cell degranulation in other contexts include reactive oxygen species (Son et al., 2006), a variety of cytokines (and perhaps myokines), increases in temperature, and vibration (Grabbe, 2001). Alternatively, histamine can be formed de novo without storage in mast cells through histidine decarboxylase (Watanabe & Ohtsu, 2002). Along these lines, histidine decarboxylase mRNA expression (Endo et al., 1998) and enzyme activity increase with prolonged exercise in mice (but not rats) (Graham et al., 1964; Ayada et al., 2000). There appear to be links between oxidative stress (Höcker et al., 1998), hypoxia inducible factor-1α (Jeong et al., 2009), and histidine decarboxylase transcription. There is also older evidence that increased shear stress promotes histamine formation in large vessels such as the aorta (DeForrest & Hollis, 1978). Future studies are needed to define the cascade of events that result in post-exercise histamine receptor activation. In particular, studies must identify the exercise-related signal (e.g., oxidative stress, increased muscle temperature) that activates the histaminergic pathway, determine the source of histamine released by this signal (i.e., mast cell degranulation and/or de novo formation), and the timing or dose-response of this system in relation to exercise.
Obligatory versus Situational Influences
As a way to comprehend varied outcomes during recovery from exercise, we identified mechanisms that appear to be obligatory versus situational influences that vary from case to case. Along these lines, prolonged muscle afferent activation and consequent resetting of the baroreflex, resetting of thermoreflexes (Journeay et al., 2006), pre-synaptic inhibition of sympathetic vasoconstrictor nerves, and activation of H1- and H2-receptors in the previously active muscle all appear to be obligatory components of post-exercise hypotension. Of these factors, histaminergic vasodilation may be the most important contributor to the fall in pressure in the normotensive and recreationally active population, as blockade of histamine receptors (Lockwood et al., 2005; McCord & Halliwill, 2006; McCord et al., 2006; Barrett-O’Keefe et al., 2013), but not removal of the sympathetic component (Halliwill et al., 2000), reduces post-exercise hypotension. Situational influences include the fluid status of the individual, heat balance with the environment, and the presence or absence of gravitational stress. We have explored how combinations of obligatory mechanisms and situational influences produce the integrated responses observed, as illustrated conceptually in Figure 2 (reproduced from Halliwill et al., 2013).
FIGURE 2. Integrated hemodynamic responses following exercise.
Regulated reductions in blood pressure known as post-exercise hypotension can be large enough in magnitude to induce pre-syncopal symptoms and lead to post-exercise syncope. The expression of post-exercise hypotension is the integration of a variety of obligatory and situational components. Obligatory components (indicated in pale blue) include 1) a sustained histaminergic vasodilation of the previously exercise skeletal muscle vascular beds, 2) resetting of the baroreflex (which generally results in sympathoinhibition of sympathetic nerves to muscle vascular beds), 3) pre-synaptic inhibition of norepinephrine release from sympathetic nerves to the exercised muscle, and 4) resetting of thermoreflexes. These changes manifest as a rise in vascular conductance of the previously exercised muscle, inhibition of sympathetic vasoconstrictor nerve activity to previously active muscle vascular beds, and little or no change in cutaneous vascular conductance despite higher core temperatures. Situational components (indicated in light yellow) include the impact of whether or not significant fluid loss, gravitational pooling of blood, and hyperthermia are present. These components can greatly impact on the extent to which cardiac output is elevated. (Reproduced from Halliwill et al., 2013).
The majority of studies report an elevated cardiac output concurrent with post-exercise hypotension, at least when subjects are studied in the supine position (Halliwill, 2001); however, this is not always the case. Reductions in cardiac output are commonly reported following exercise in endurance trained men even in the supine position (but not endurance trained women, for unknown reasons)(Senitko et al., 2002). Heart rate is consistently elevated following exercise, and this is likely the product of higher temperatures affecting the SA node pacemaker. This may confound many of the studies exploring baroreflex control of heart rate following exercise.
Stroke volume is generally well maintained, despite reductions in central venous pressure (Halliwill et al., 2000). Stroke volume appears highly sensitive to both core temperature and fluid status but seems to be supported by enhanced contractility of unknown origin. Again, endurance trained men stand alone as a group that exhibits a reduced stroke volume following exercise (Senitko et al., 2002; Lynn et al., 2009). Ironically, it may be that the greater heat storage seen in less fit men (a response which allows for heat dissipation via physical mechanisms when physiological mechanisms are limited), leads to an enhanced cardiac contractility which is absent in highly fit men, and the absence of this effect leads to the marked fall in stroke volume in endurance trained men after exercise (Lynn et al., 2009).
It is worth noting that the majority of studies reporting cardiac output and stroke volume have been performed with subjects in a supine position, and one would predict that upright recovery, via the increase in gravitational pooling of blood, would shift the system toward lower stroke volumes and cardiac outputs. While this is often observed (McCord et al., 2008), there are also examples in which cardiac output remained surprisingly high during upright tilt after exercise (Lacewell et al., 2013). These differences are likely related to the different exercise stimuli in these studies which may result in differing thermal, autonomic, and hormonal influences on the heart. Further, the impact of changes in plasma volume, which decreases ~ 10% in the upright position, may be markedly impacted by exercise or thermal stress, and may change in response to the vascular responses in liver, skin, and muscle vascular beds.
Despite all these potential variations in the underlying physiology, in most cases where measurements are made upright following moderate intensity exercise, post-exercise blood pressure remains lower than pre-exercise, yet is still well regulated in the upright position (Senitko et al., 2002).
Post-exercise Syncope
Post-exercise syncope has an unknown rate of occurrence. There is likely an overlap between severe post-exercise hypotension, the development of post-exercise syncope, and the phenomenon of exercise-induced collapse, particularly when collapse occurs immediately after exercise and/or completion of athletic performance (e.g., crossing the finish line of a marathon)(Noakes, 1988; Holtzhausen et al., 1994; Holtzhausen & Noakes, 1995, 1997; Kenefick & Sawka, 2007). While it is likely that the regulated reductions in blood pressure known as post-exercise hypotension can be large enough in magnitude as to become symptomatic under some circumstances, most reports of post-exercise syncope are likely incidences of neurally mediated syncope (formerly called vasovagal syncope) during recovery from exercise, with the underlying changes associated with post-exercise hypotension contributing to the onset of the event (Krediet et al., 2004). Generally speaking, when standing upright following exercise, elevations in skeletal muscle blood flow combined with an inactive muscle pump can lead to marked reductions in venous return to the heart, a response which can be exacerbated in the heat (Krediet et al., 2004; McCord et al., 2008; Kenney et al., 2013). By mechanisms which remain surprisingly murky (Noakes, 2003; Hainsworth, 2003; Joyner, 2009), the situation of high cardiac contractility and compromised venous return may trigger both paradoxical reductions in sympathetic vasoconstrictor nerve activity and increases in parasympathetic cardiac nerve activity. The mechanism or trigger for such neurally mediated syncope is often attributed to ventricular mechanoreceptors firing in response to a misinterpreted tissue distortion and producing a response that is akin to the Bezold-Jarish reflex. Others have argued that the trigger is more likely to be generated within the central nervous system rather than within the ventricles (Hainsworth, 2003), and may involve serotonin receptors in the rostral ventrolateral medulla (Dean & Bago, 2002). This is a neglected topic of investigation. Regardless of where the origins of the response resides, the shift toward greater vasodilation (due to sympathetic withdrawal) and a relative or frank bradycardia leads to a rapid collapse of arterial pressure and cerebral perfusion.
It is possible that some cases of post-exercise syncope are related to alterations in cerebral blood flow independent of vasovagal reactions or frank hypotension. For example, hypocapnia induced by hyperventilation during recovery from exercise could produce a cerebral vasoconstriction and diminish cerebral oxygen delivery in the absence of any change in perfusion pressure. Along these lines, Rasmussen et al. (2006) showed that cerebral CO2 vascular reactivity following strenuous exercise is increased such that arterial CO2 becomes the primary factor influencing changes in cerebral blood flow during and after prolonged exercise.
The potential for changes in cerebral autoregulation following exercise has also been explored. While cerebral autoregulation is well-maintained following moderate intensity exercise (Ogoh et al., 2007; Murrell et al., 2007; Willie et al., 2013), two studies suggest that more intense exercise may produce a lasting cerebral autoregulatory deficit. Specifically, Ogoh et al. (2005) found reduced dynamic cerebral autoregulation during heavy cycle exercise and Bailey et al. (2011) found reduced dynamic cerebral autoregulation during recovery from a recumbent cycle peak test. Thus, it seems likely that cerebral perfusion is less protected from sudden onset hypotension following more intense exercise.
Table 1 summarizes case reports and case series of post-exercise syncope in which individual patient information on age and sex were provided. It is worth noting that many cases include asystole, evidence of the vagal component of neurally mediated syncope. However, depending on the timing of events and the progression toward symptoms, bradycardia is not always evident.
In reviewing the case reports and case series, some interesting patterns are evident regarding age and sex of individual patients, as indicated in Figure 3. First, in contrast to conventional wisdom, the majority of cases of post-exercise syncope occur in men. In general, women have decreased orthostatic tolerance compared to men, and this holds true in response to heat stress (Meendering et al., 2005), but not recovery from exercise (Lacewell et al., 2013). It is reasonable to suggest that the higher number of cases in men is a spurious result, perhaps due to greater historical participation in physical activities, but the pattern holds true in several prospective studies (Fleg & Lakatta, 1986; Lacewell et al., 2013). Second, the cases represent a broad range of ages, with nearly every decade of life represented with a higher proportion of cases below the age of 50.
FIGURE 3. Sex and age of patients evaluated with post-exercise syncope.
Panel A: The percentage of male and female patients in case reports. Panel B: The distribution of case reports on post-exercise syncope by age. Both figures are based on data from references listed in Table 1 (n = 27).
There are several other notable case series related to post-exercise syncope. First, as part of the Baltimore Longitudinal Study on Aging, Fleg & Lakatta (1986) analyzed post-exercise blood pressure responses in a large cohort of healthy volunteers. During seated recovery from a graded maximal treadmill test, 3.1% of subjects younger than 55 yrs exhibited a marked hypotension that was associated with pre-syncopal symptoms. The incidence was lower in women than men, and was only 0.3% for subjects older than 55 yrs. Long-term investigation of subjects who became symptomatically hypotensive following exercise did not indicate any increased health risks, supporting the notion that the prognosis related to post-exercise syncope is generally benign. Second, Sakaguchi et al. (1995) reported on a group of 12 patients who were referred for exercise-related syncope. They noted a general susceptibility to neurally mediated syncope in these individuals, fostering the concept that most cases of syncope following exercise are incidences of neurally mediated syncope. Third, Holtzhausen et al. (1994) reported on 46 male athletes who collapsed during or after a 56-km ultramarathon, finding that 85% of these cases occurred after the finish line (i.e., post-exercise), and that hydration status (a surrogate for circulating blood volume) and core temperature in those who collapsed post-race are no different than control athletes who do not collapse. In other words, traditional contributing factors such as dehydration, hypovolemia, and hyperthermia are not necessary for post-exercise syncope following longer duration athletic events. Finally, an interesting report by Eckart et al. (2010) suggests that the use of ergogenic supplements (e.g., stimulants such as ephedra and ephedra-substitutes) can increase the risk of post-exercise syncope three-fold.
While the long-term prognosis related to post-exercise syncope is generally benign, it is important that other more serious causes be ruled out by thorough clinical evaluation, as syncope after exercise can be a sign of a significant pathophysiology (Kramer et al., 1988; Smith et al., 1993; Krediet et al., 2004; O’Connor et al., 2009; Hastings & Levine, 2012).
PART 2: EXPLORATION OF DIFFERENT EXERCISE MODELS THAT GENERATE POST-EXERCISE SYNCOPE
Much of our understanding of the mechanisms of post-exercise hypotension come from a single model of exercise, namely, moderate-intensity exercise of medium-duration (e.g., up to 60 min) performed in a thermoneutral environment. However, the cases of post-exercise syncope do not fall neatly into this model, but come from a range of exercise activities which may differentially affect arterial pressure regulation or control of cerebral oxygen delivery. Let us explore five archetypal exercise models, with the understanding that when individuals exercise, it may be on a spectrum that combines elements of these five models. Table 2 summarizes prospective studies on post-exercise syncope, as they relate to these models, in which pre-syncopal rates during head-up tilt (or tolerance to lower body negative pressure) were assessed during recovery from exercise.
1) Moderate-intensity exercise
In young healthy normotensive individuals, moderate-intensity exercise for 30–60 min produces modest post-exercise hypotension via the mechanisms described above, but is generally insufficient to elicit post-exercise syncope during seated recovery or brief (5 min) head-up tilt when performed in a thermoneutral environment (Raine et al., 2001; Senitko et al., 2002). However, the incidence of orthostatic intolerance can be surprisingly high in response to even mild exercise when orthostatic stress is more prolonged (15 min)(Mayerson, 1944). Further, when moderate-intensity exercise is of extended duration, or under moderately warm conditions, the pre-syncopal incidence can reach as high as 54 to 81% (Eichna et al., 1947a; Murrell et al., 2009, 2011), as shown in Table 2.
This model of post-exercise syncope is ostensibly explained by the effects of the sustained post-exercise vasodilation on reducing total peripheral resistance and reducing venous return to the heart. Noakes and colleagues (Noakes, 1988, 2007; Holtzhausen & Noakes, 1997) have argued that hyperthermia and dehydration play little or no role in the collapse of athletes at the end of marathons, whereas sustained peripheral vasodilation and loss of the muscle pump appear sufficient to explain many cases of post-exercise syncope following moderate-intensity exercise of extended duration. It is worth noting that the early work by Eichna (1947a) found the increased incidence of pre-syncope during head-up tilt persists for 1 to 2 hours following exercise. This is a timeline that is similar to the duration of the sustained post-exercise vasodilation that is mediated by histamine-receptor activation (Emhoff et al., 2011).
2) High-intensity exercise
In contrast to moderate-intensity exercise, there are fewer studies investigating post-exercise hypotension and related phenomenon following short-duration high-intensity exercise. However, there is anecdotal evidence that the Wingate test of anaerobic power, a staple of undergraduate exercise physiology labs, results in pre-syncopal symptoms in many individuals. Likewise, the classic study by Eichna et al (1947a) found that more than half of healthy individuals will become pre-syncopal during a 5-min head-up tilt after completion of maximal exercise. More recently, Lacewell et al. (2013) developed a modified Wingate test which produces post-exercise syncope in many individuals. Such maximal or supra-maximal efforts when followed by head-up tilt or active standing elicit pre-syncopal responses in 58 to 100% of individuals, as shown in Table 2.
What is interesting in the study by Lacewell et al. (2013) is that arterial pressure was often well-maintained at or above pre-exercise levels until a sudden shift to hypotension and development of pre-syncopal symptoms. In other words, arterial pressure did not demonstrate post-exercise hypotension prior to post-exercise syncope, rather pressure was well-maintained (until it was not).
One of the characteristics of recovery from high-intensity exercise is marked hyperventilation which can reduce arterial CO2 to values that would likely induce prominent cerebral vasoconstriction. For example, after a modified Wingate test, end-tidal CO2 decreased 14 mmHg to levels that would be associated with a ~ 40% reduction in cerebral perfusion (Lacewell et al., 2013). There are cases of athletes developing syncope as a result of brief vigorous hyperventilation (Buja et al., 1989).
The potential role of autoregulation in this model also merits discussion. While cerebral autoregulation is well-maintained following moderate intensity exercise (Ogoh et al., 2007; Murrell et al., 2007; Willie et al., 2013), two studies suggest that more intense exercise may produce a lasting cerebral autoregulatory deficit. Specifically, Ogoh et al. (2005) found reduced dynamic cerebral autoregulation (as assessed by transfer function) during heavy cycle exercise and Bailey et al. (2011) found reduced dynamic cerebral autoregulation (as assessed by thigh-cuff release) during recovery from a recumbent cycle peak test. Thus, it seems likely that cerebral perfusion is less protected from sudden onset hypotension following high-intensity exercise.
3) Exercise in the heat
Exercise in the heat adds another level of complexity to these integrated responses. This model is exemplified by moderate-intensity exercise of moderate to long duration that is performed in a hot environment, which could be either arid or humid. Thus, the situational component that adds complexity to this model is the greater heat load, secondary to the reduced ability to dissipate metabolic heat to the environment. When individuals are exercising hard enough or long enough to generate significant increases in core temperature, then the physiological accommodations to heat stress such as cutaneous vasodilation and sweating can lead to reductions in central venous pressure, dehydration, and hypovolemia.
As recently reviewed by Kenney et al. (2013), there is a commensal use of cardiac output to serve both the metabolic demands of the exercising muscle and thermoregulatory need for heat dissipation (Rowell, 1977). While skin blood flow may increase to more than 7 L/min (more than half of available cardiac output) during passive heat stress (Rowell, 1986; Crandall et al., 2010), in normal exercising individuals the blood flow needed to maintain heat dissipation and muscular activity is not a great enough demand to limit either of these vasculatures or to compromise blood pressure regulation (Kenney et al., 2013). That said, the non-competing division of cardiac output may deteriorate into competition for limited cardiac output at the end of exercise (when the muscle pump is lost), but some surprising observations have been made.
While the greater fluid loss associated with exercise in the heat can be predicted to decrease cardiac preload, Lynn et al. (2009) showed that greater elevations in heart rate following exercise in the heat are associated with an augmentation of cardiac output that is as great as what can be produced by fluid replacement, at least when subjects are supine. However, it is clear that the skin, when vasodilated in response to passive heat stress, is insufficiently vasoconstricted with orthostatic stress to support cardiac preload and, therefore, predisposes individuals to the development of syncope in the heat (Crandall, 2008; Crandall et al., 2010; Pearson et al., 2013).
Following exercise, other vascular beds likely vasoconstrict to maintain pressure in response to orthostatic challenge. While the arterial baroreflex is reset to maintain arterial pressure at lower levels following exercise, sensitivity of baroreflex control of sympathetic outflow is augmented after exercise in the heat, possibly due to greater reductions in central venous pressure that result in decreased cardiopulmonary baroreceptor activation (Charkoudian et al., 2003). However, it is likely that the vasoconstrictor reserve is reached for important vasculatures such as the splanchnic region during this combination of stressors (Crandall, 2008; Crandall et al., 2010; Pearson et al., 2013), leaving little if any margin for maintaining cerebral perfusion in the upright position. Further, there is some evidence that exercise in the heat may produce a lasting deficit in the cerebral autoregulation which is observable after the return to resting body temperatures (Carter et al., 2006). Thus, it is not surprising that classic studies documented a decreased orthostatic tolerance following exercise in the heat (Greenleaf et al., 1974; Shvartz et al., 1977), and brief high-intensity (Greenleaf et al., 1974), prolonged low-intensity (Shvartz et al., 1977), and medium-duration moderate-intensity (McCord et al., 2008) exercise in the heat have all been used as prospective models for studying post-exercise syncope.
4) Exercise at altitude
Anecdotes of altitude-related syncope both during and after exercise abound, but few (if any) have been documented in the literature (Hultgren, 1997). That said, it is well established that neurally mediated syncope can be produced in most individuals by having them breathe low O2 levels (< 8 %), and that some individuals will become syncopal while breathing moderately hypoxic O2 mixtures (13 – 14 % O2) similar to the O2 levels at altitudes of 3000–4000 m. At these altitudes, orthostatic tolerance is reduced (Halliwill, 2003).
Early hemodynamic studies highlighted a potential role of exaggerated circulating epinephrine levels in precipitating hypoxic syncope (Halliwill, 2003; Halliwill & Minson, 2005). Dinenno et al. (2003) were able to obtain an arterial blood sample from a hypoxic individual at the onset of hypotension and bradycardia and found 4-fold higher epinephrine than other subjects exposed to the same degree of hypoxia. This observation is consistent with the notion of exaggerated circulating epinephrine in hypoxic syncope. In this individual, high epinephrine was associated with progressive skeletal muscle vasodilation, but part of the hypotension may have been linked to hypoxic vasodilation of the splanchnic circulation (Rowell & Blackmon, 1989; Westendorp et al., 1997). One case report suggests that β-adrenergic blockade may prevent hypoxic syncope (Freitas et al., 1996).
With this background on hypoxic syncope, one can surmise that post-exercise syncope at altitude is multi-factorial, combining the elements of the other exercise models with epinephrine-induced vasodilation and a possible splanchnic steal of blood flow. These factors, which acting alone can compromise cerebral perfusion, would act in combination with reduced arterial oxygen content to diminish cerebral oxygenation.
5) Resistance exercise
While most of the focus of this review is on the response to dynamic whole-body exercise, it is worth mentioning that resistance exercise is also associated with post-exercise syncopal episodes. Often referred to as “weightlifter’s blackout,” post-resistance exercise syncope occurs during exercise or within seconds of completion (Compton et al., 1973).
Unlike the moderate blood pressure increase that occurs during aerobic exercise, arterial blood pressure is profoundly elevated during resistance exercise. Arterial blood pressure has been reported to reach 320/250 mmHg during maximal double-leg press (Macdougall et al., 1985), although the rise in pressure during submaximal resistance exercise does not approach these levels (Edwards et al., 2002; Romero & Cooke, 2007). In the face of increased perfusion pressure, cerebral perfusion (measured via transcranial Doppler) is unchanged (Edwards et al., 2002) or slightly elevated (Romero & Cooke, 2007) during moderate intensity resistance exercise, but is reduced during high intensity resistance exercise (Dickerman et al., 2000; Perry et al., 2013) perhaps as protection against hypertension (Tzeng & Ainslie, 2013).
Subsequent to the marked elevation in blood pressure during resistance exercise, pressure falls rapidly to below pre-exercise levels upon the completion of the lift (Macdougall et al., 1985; Edwards et al., 2002; Pott et al., 2003; Romero & Cooke, 2007). As a result, cerebral perfusion falls below pre-exercise levels immediately following exercise (Edwards et al., 2002; Romero & Cooke, 2007). The precipitous fall in arterial blood pressure immediately following resistance exercise may be a sufficient challenge to the cerebrovascular regulatory mechanisms to produce syncope (i.e., the large and rapid “swing” in pressure may be beyond the upper and lower limits of cerebral autoregulation)(Macdougall et al., 1985; Dickerman et al., 2000).
Several additional mechanisms may exacerbate this state and contribute to post-resistance exercise syncope. First, voluntary or involuntary hyperventilation before or during resistance exercise may induce cerebral vasoconstriction (Compton et al., 1973; Romero & Cooke, 2007), similar to what we have discussed above for high-intensity exercise. Second, Valsalva straining during lifting may produce sudden blood pressure transitions both during and immediately after straining (Compton et al., 1973). Third, dehydration is a common practice among competitive weightlifters and other weight-class athletes (e.g., wrestling and boxing), and the reduced circulating blood volume associated with hypohydration can further reduce tolerance to post-exercise orthostatic challenges (Hand, 1997; Moralez et al., 2012).
In summary, one can consider these five archetypal exercise models as situational variations on the underlying physiology that may increase or decrease the predisposition toward post-exercise syncopal events. Some of these models are well developed, but some remain poorly investigated.
PART 3: CLASSIFICATIONS OF POTENTIAL COUNTERMEASURES
The majority of evidence indicates that post-exercise syncope, in the absence of other medical conditions, is a nuisance. One to three percent of emergency department visits in the United States, with an estimated cost of $5400 per patient and totaling $2.5 billion a year, are due to syncope (Sun et al., 2005). It is important to recognize that post-exercise syncope can be situationally life-threatening (e.g., cycling, climbing, firefighting, and military operations), and several case reports on post-exercise syncope involve firefighters (Osswald et al., 1994; van den Berg et al., 1995; Krediet et al., 2006). Thus, the development of countermeasures which can protect against post-exercise syncope should focus on ways to protect the individual from loss of consciousness during recovery from exercise. The current arsenal of countermeasures falls into three basic categories: behavioral, pharmacological, and pacemakers. The evidence for these existing countermeasures is almost exclusively anecdotal. Table 3 summarizes case reports of post-exercise syncope which included an intervention or treatment and follow-up.
TABLE 3.
CASE STUDIES WITH INTERVENTIONS AND FOLLOW-UP
Reference | Treatment/Intervention | Outcome/Follow-up |
---|---|---|
Behavioral | ||
Fleg & Asante, 1983 | Avoid strenuous exercise | No further episodes at 3 months |
Hirata et al., 1987 | Avoid strenuous exercise | n/a |
Tamura et al., 1990 | Cardiac pacing and active walking recovery | No further episodes with use of active recovery |
Tse & Lau, 1995 | Avoid strenuous exercise | No further episodes at 12 months |
van den Berg et al., 1995 | Avoid strenuous exercise | n/a |
Crisafulli et al., 2000 | Active recovery after exercise | n/a |
Thijs et al., 2003 | Ingest 1000 ml water, 15 min prior to exercise | No further episodes with use of countermeasure at 2 months |
Krediet et al., 2005 | Instruction to try squatting, leg-crossing, leg-buttock- abdominal muscle tensing, and drinking water | No further episodes with use of physical countermeasures at 4 months |
Krediet et al., 2006 | Active recovery after exercise | No further episodes at 5 years |
Krediet et al., 2006 | Avoid strenuous exercise | No further episodes at 9 months |
Karadag et al., 2007 | Avoid strenuous exercise | No further episodes at 3 years |
Pharmacological | ||
Tsutsumi et al., 1979 | β-blocker [20 mg pindolol] | n/a |
Huycke et al., 1987 | β-blocker [14 mg propranolol IV, then 20 mg every 6 hours for 3 days before exercise testing]; avoid strenuous exercise | No further episodes with avoidance at 1 year |
Pedersen et al., 1989 | β-blocker [100 mg metoprolol twice daily] | No further episodes at long-term follow up |
Osswald et al., 1994 | Anti-arrhythmic/anti-muscarinc [disopyramide] | No further episodes at 38 months |
Osswald et al., 1994 | β-blocker [25 mg atenolol daily] | No further episodes at 9 months |
Pacemaker | ||
Kapoor, 1989 | Dual-chamber permanent pacemaker | No further episodes at 4 year |
Lowe et al., 2000 | Dual-chamber permanent pacemaker | Some pre-syncopal symptoms after exercise, but no measurable hypotension |
Ziegelstein, 2004 | Dual-chamber permanent pacemaker | No further episodes at 2 years |
Dockery & Newman, 2007 | Dual-chamber permanent pacemaker | No further episodes |
van den Berg et al., 1995 | Rate-responsive [QT] VVI pacemaker | Asymptomatic with exercise |
Karadag et al., 2007 | Dual-chamber permanent pacemaker | No further episodes at 26 months |
Karadag et al., 2007 | Dual-chamber permanent pacemaker | No further episodes at 12 months |
To the best of our knowledge, there is one randomized controlled trial for post-collapse treatment (but not prevention) (Anley et al., 2011), one randomized controlled trial for prevention in athletes with post-exercise syncope (Privett et al., 2010b), and two randomized controlled trials for prevention in models of post-exercise syncope performed in healthy subjects (McCord et al., 2008; Lacewell et al., 2013), as summarized in Table 4 and Figure 4.
TABLE 4. COUNTERMEASURES AGAINST POST-EXERCISE SYNCOPE.
Prospective studies in which pre-syncopal rates during head-up tilt were assessed during recovery from exercise with a countermeasure designed to prevent syncope.
Reference | Exercise and orthostatic test | Countermeasure | Outcome |
---|---|---|---|
Eichna et al., 1947a | High-intensity exercise; 70 head-up tilt [5 min] | Alternate movement of the legs; vascular occlusion of the legs prior to tilt | Reduced incidence of pre-syncope |
McCord et al., 2008 | Exercise in the heat; 60 head-up tilt [15 min] | Histamine H1-receptor blockade | Reduced incidence of pre-syncope from 53% to 27% |
Privett et al., 2010b | High-intensity exercise; active standing [10 min] | Heel raises | Reduced incidence of pre-syncope from 100% to 33% |
Privett et al., 2010b | High-intensity exercise; active standing [10 min] | Compression stockings | Reduced incidence of pre-syncope from 100% to 16% |
Lacewell et al., 2013 | High-intensity exercise; 60 head-up tilt [15 min] | Inspiratory resistance | Reduced incidence of pre-syncope from 58% to 33% |
FIGURE 4. Survival time during head-up tilt following exercise - two models and two countermeasures.
The proportion of subjects remaining in the tilted position as shown by survival function curve. Panel A: Effect of H1-receptor blockade on head-up tilt after 45 min running in the heat. (Modified from McCord et al., 2008). Panel B: Effect of inspiratory resistance on head-up tile after 1 min high-intensity exercise. (Modified from Lacewell et al., 2013). Solid line represents the control day; dotted line, countermeasure day.
Behavioral
It is disappointing that one of the most common medical recommendations to patients with post-exercise syncope is to simply avoid vigorous exercise. Considering the numerous health benefits of routine vigorous exercise, this is not an acceptable remedy. Rather, avoidance of exercise should be seen as a last resort when all other countermeasures have failed to protect the individual.
In contrast to preaching avoidance, a number of easily learned physical countermeasures designed to engage the muscle pump and augment venous return are often found to be beneficial in preventing a significant drop in blood pressure after exercise. A classic study by Eichna et al. (1947a) showed that alternate movement of the legs during orthostatic hypotension following exhaustive physical work in young, healthy soldiers raised blood pressure markedly. Likewise, Krediet et al. (2005) demonstrated that a simple squatting maneuver could ameliorate pre-syncopal symptoms and normalize blood pressure in a patient in whom neurally mediated syncope could be consistently triggered by moderate cycle exercise. One can consider such countermeasures, along with the advice to “keep moving” after exercise, as a simple and effective means to avoid many cases of post-exercise syncope, as active recovery has been reported to be beneficial in some cases (Tamura et al., 1990; Krediet et al., 2006). However, there are likely limitations inherent in asking an exhausted athlete to rely on their fatigued muscles to protect them from post-race collapse, and it is likely that the finish-line chute standstill has contributed to some cases of syncope (Holtzhausen & Noakes, 1995; Anon, 2004). If active recovery is not practical, then use of the Trendelenberg position (or simply lifting the legs of the supine individual) may be an effective way to rectify venous return to the heart (Anley et al., 2011).
Lacewell et al. (2013) recently demonstrated the benefits of using an inspiratory resistance device to alleviate post-exercise syncope following high-intensity exercise, as shown in Figure 4B. Originally developed for the treatment of severe hemorrhage and shock, an impedance threshold device generates resistance during inspiration which may augment the function of the respiratory pump in mobilizing venous blood toward the heart. However, it is possible that the main benefit of the device following high-intensity exercise is the attenuation of hypocapnic cerebral vasoconstriction or enhancement of a cerebral siphon effect.
Another behavioral approach with promise is the use of water ingestion (Thijs et al., 2003), not in the prevention of dehydration, but owing to the pressor response elicited by ingestion of modest to large volumes of hypotonic fluid. In other studies, fluid ingestion to replace that lost during exercise has been shown to reduce cardiovascular strain during lower body negative pressure (Davis & Fortney, 1997). However, when treating post-competition collapse following endurance events Anley et al. (2011) found that use of the Trendelenberg position was as effective as intravenous fluids.
Lastly, compression garments can be of benefit in reducing the likelihood of post-exercise syncope (Privett et al., 2010b). Use of compression garments of various types are seeing more widespread use by the athletic community, so routine use of such garments in an individual with recurring symptoms during recovery from exercise may be an appealing alternative to some of the more invasive countermeasures described below.
Pharmacological
It is clear that many of the clinical approaches that are employed to treat patients with post-exercise syncope has been adapted from those tools that have also seen routine use in treating neurally mediated syncope. Thus, the use of α-adrenergic blocking drugs is the most common pharmacological countermeasure (see Table 3), followed by the antiarrhythmic agent disopyramide (which is used in part because of its vagolytic effects). These standard pharmacological approaches remain controversial in treatment of neurally mediated syncope, where anecdotal evidence and case reports are promising but evidence from controlled trials is often inconclusive (Kaufmann & Freeman, 2004).
It is important to recognize that none of the common pharmacological approaches, such as α-adrenergic blocking drugs, act directly on the underlying physiology related to post-exercise hypotension or sustained post-exercise vasodilation (except perhaps in the setting of altitude, where circulating epinephrine is an issue). However, McCord et al. (2008), tested the effectiveness of H1-receptor antagonism in preventing post-exercise syncope induced by head-up tilt following exercise in the heat. They found the magnitude of the arterial pressure drop during head-up tilt was blunted by administration of an H1-receptor antagonist, and subjects were able to stand longer before the development of pre-syncopal signs and symptoms, as shown in Figure 4A. In essence, this is the first pharmacological countermeasure which directly targets the underlying physiology of recovery from exercise.
Pacemakers
In a number of cases, pacemakers have been implanted in patients with post-exercise syncope. Like the use of α-adrenergic blocking drugs, this is a countermeasure adapted from the clinical toolbox routinely used to deal with neurally mediated syncope. While a number of case reports (see Table 3) suggest that pacemakers are effective, such anecdotes are far from definitive and the use of pacemakers for the treatment of neurally mediated syncope remains controversial (Petersen & Sutton, 1997; Romme et al., 2011). As reviewed here, knowledge of the physiology of post-exercise hypotension, sustained post-exercise vasodilation, and post-exercise syncope do not provide a rationale for the use of implanted pacemakers, when other less-invasive countermeasures are likely to be beneficial.
Other directions
We believe there are other potential directions for interventions, and that a systematic view of the underlying physiology of post-exercise hypotension and syncope can be used as a roadmap. Specifically, each of the five archetypal exercise models may respond to targeted interventions with greater efficacy than a “one size fits all” approach, but some interventions may prove universally beneficial, but perhaps to lesser effect. The ideal solution, if it exists, would be a non-invasive countermeasure that does not require the individual to medicate daily, and that can be deployed “as needed” without the need to carry equipment or wear special clothing.
One approach would be countermeasures that increase total peripheral resistance. In hot conditions, rapid skin cooling may prove an effective means of reducing cutaneous vascular conductance and improving hemodynamic stability. Along these lines, Wilson et al. (2002) demonstrated that, in a model of passive heat stress, rapid skin cooling protected arterial pressure, cerebral perfusion, and decreased pre-syncopal symptoms during head-up tilt. In other situations, sympathoexcitatory maneuvers such as bolus fluid ingestion of water or hand immersion in ice water to elicit a cold pressor response might be sufficient to increase total peripheral resistance and provide benefit. Pharmacological interventions that target specific vascular beds such as the highly compliant splanchnic circulation may prove effective in enhancing total peripheral resistance (Jarvis et al., 2012), and could be very advantageous for exercise at altitude.
Another approach would be countermeasures designed to augment cardiac preload, beyond administering fluids and engaging the muscle pump (Tamura et al., 1990; Krediet et al., 2006). Augmentation of the respiratory pump via inspiratory resistance shows some promise in this area (Lacewell et al., 2013), and it is possible that some of the sympathoexcitatory maneuvers or rapid skin cooling also function to augment cardiac preload. External compression by medical compression garments or other means may be viable, but perhaps less than ideal.
The least explored approach would be countermeasures designed to protect cerebral blood flow directly, by either causing cerebral vasodilation or boosting cerebral perfusion pressure gradients. Along these lines, when hypocapnia is a likely contributing factor (high-intensity exercise or resistance exercise), it is possible that something as simple as rebreathing from a paper bag might help protect cerebral blood flow by maintaining higher arterial CO2 levels. To the extent that the cerebral siphon effect is present in upright humans (which remains highly debated), breathing maneuvers which engage the respiratory pump may prove effective in augmenting the cerebral perfusion pressure gradient (as discussed in Lacewell et al., 2013). Lastly, supplemental oxygen could also be beneficial, but it seems to be seldom deployed during recovery from exercise aside from NFL games played at modest altitudes (~1610m).
One interesting potential countermeasure that may need to be re-explored is the role of acclimatization to heat. Early work by Greenleaf et al. (1974) found that orthostatic tolerance following exercise in the heat was, surprisingly, made worse by prior heat acclimatization. It is unclear how acclimatization, which greatly improves the ability to exercise in the heat and is associated with plasma volume expansion, would prove to be deleterious in the setting of post-exercise syncope.
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
Blood pressure regulation after exercise is about much more than a simple loss of the muscle pump. Newer investigations on the recovery from exercise provide insight into the mechanisms of baroreflex resetting, the sustained histamine-mediated vasodilation, and changes in cerebral autoregulation. Thus, obligatory alterations in the control of sympathetic vascular tone and skeletal muscle blood flow interact with situational effects like cutaneous vasodilation in the heat, dehydration, hypoxic vasodilation, and hypocapnic cerebral vasoconstriction to produce the post-exercise hypotension, and in some cases post-exercise syncope. Mining of case and prospective studies hints at additional influences regarding who is likely to suffer from pre-syncopal symptoms after exercise and under what circumstances. Together, this information creates a framework for challenging some of the traditional treatment strategies and for developing novel countermeasures against post-exercise syncope.
Acknowledgments
This research was supported in part by grants from the American Heart Association, Grant-in-Aid 11GRNT5490000, and National Institutes of Health Grant HL115027.
Footnotes
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
All authors contributed directly to the writing of this review. Each drafted a substantial section, assisted in revising the entire review, and approved the final version.
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