Abstract
Abstract only A history of preeclampsia (PE) places women at higher risk for future cardiovascular disease and cognitive decline. We have previously shown that postmenopausal women with a history of PE demonstrated a reduced cerebral blood flow response to hypercapnia compared with postmenopausal women with a history of a normotensive pregnancy (NP). These findings suggest cerebrovascular effects of PE 30+ years postpartum. In addition, we have reported that women with a history of PE did not have an exaggerated pressor response to a sympathoexcitatory stimulus. However, it is possible that women with a history of PE may have an altered cerebral blood flow response to a sympathoexcitatory stimulus. In this study, middle cerebral artery blood velocity (MCAv) and beat‐to‐beat mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) were measured during isometric handgrip to fatigue (IHG) at 30% of maximal voluntary contraction followed by post‐exercise ischemia (PEI) for 90 seconds and a two minute recovery period (REC). Participants were postmenopausal women with a history of PE (n = 21; age at study = 58±5 y; years since last pregnancy = 35±3 y) and NP (n = 27; age at study = 58±5 y; years since last pregnancy = 35±3 y). Baseline MAP and MAP responses to IHG and PEI were similar between groups (p>0.05). PE women demonstrated lower MCAv at baseline (NP: 72±3 cm/s vs. PE: 57±4 cm/s), IHG (NP: 78±4 cm/s vs. PE: 63±4 cm/s), PEI (NP: 74±4 cm/s vs. PE: 60±4 cm/s), and REC (NP: 70±3 cm/s vs. PE: 58±4 cm/s) compared with NP women (p<0.05 for all). MCAv, when calculated as a percent change from baseline, was elevated during IHG in both PE and NP women as expected (p<0.05); however, PE women had an augmented MCAv response during the last third of IHG compared with NP women (NP: 9±2 % vs. PE: 13±2 %; p<0.05). PE women also had a higher MCAv response during REC compared with NP women (NP:−2±2% vs. PE: 3±2%; p<0.05). Importantly, these elevated MCAv responses occurred despite the fact that MAP was not different between groups. In summary, PE women demonstrated a lower basal cerebral blood velocity but an elevated cerebrovascular response to a sympathoexcitatory stimulus compared with NP women. This suggests that in postmenopausal women, there is an effect of pregnancy history on the sensitivity of the cerebral blood flow response to a sympathoexcitatory stimulus. Support or Funding Information NIH: AG 044170. This investigation was supported by the National Institutes of Health, under Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award T32 HL 007936 from the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute to the University of Wisconsin‐Madison Cardiovascular Research Center. This abstract is from the Experimental Biology 2019 Meeting. There is no full text article associated with this abstract published in The FASEB Journal .