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Dive into the research topics where Heather Edgell is active.

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Featured researches published by Heather Edgell.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2012

Hemodynamics and brain blood flow during posture change in younger women and postmenopausal women compared with age-matched men

Heather Edgell; Andrew D. Robertson; Richard L. Hughson

Increased incidence of orthostatic hypotension and presyncopal symptoms in young women could be related to hormonal factors that might be isolated by comparing cardiovascular and cerebrovascular responses to postural change in young and older men and women. Seven young women, 11 young men, 10 older women (>1 yr postmenopausal, no hormone therapy), and 9 older men participated in a supine-to-sit-to-stand test while measuring systemic hemodynamics, end-tidal Pco(2), and blood flow velocity of the middle cerebral artery (MCA). Women had a greater reduction in stroke volume index compared with age-matched men (change from supine to standing: young women: -22.9 ± 1.6 ml/m(2); young men: -14.4 ± 2.4 ml/m(2); older women: -17.4 ± 3.3 ml/m(2); older men: -13.8 ± 2.2 ml/m(2)). This was accompanied by offsetting changes in heart rate, particularly in young women, resulting in no age or sex differences in cardiac output index. Mean arterial pressure (MAP) was higher in older subjects and increased with movement to upright postures. Younger men and women had higher forearm vascular resistance that increased progressively in the upright posture compared with older men and women. There was no difference between sexes or ages in total peripheral resistance index. Women had higher MCA velocity, but both sexes had reduced MCA velocity while upright, which was a function of reduced blood pressure at the MCA and a significant reduction in end-tidal Pco(2). The reductions in stroke volume index suggested impaired venous return in women, but augmented responses of heart rate and forearm vascular resistance protected MAP in younger women. Overall, these results showed significant sex and age-related differences, but compensatory mechanisms preserved MAP and MCA velocity in young women.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2012

WISE 2005: responses of women to sublingual nitroglycerin before and after 56 days of 6° head-down bed rest

Kathryn Zuj; Heather Edgell; J. K. Shoemaker; Marc-Antoine Custaud; Philippe Arbeille; Richard L. Hughson

This study tested the hypothesis that cardiovascular effects of sublingual nitroglycerin (NG) would be exaggerated after 56 days of 6° head-down bed rest (HDBR) in women, and that an aerobic and resistive exercise countermeasure (EX, n = 8) would reduce the effect compared with HDBR without exercise (CON, n = 7). Middle cerebral artery maximal blood flow velocity (CBFV), cardiac stroke volume (SV), and superficial femoral artery blood flow (Doppler ultrasound) were recorded at baseline rest and for 5 min following 0.3 mg sublingual NG. Post-HDBR, NG caused greater increases in heart rate (HR) in CON compared with EX (+24.9 ± 7.7 and +18.8 ± 6.6 beats/min, respectively, P < 0.0001). The increase in HR combined with reductions in SV to maintain cardiac output. Systolic, mean, and pulse pressures were reduced 5-10 mmHg by NG, but total peripheral resistance was only slightly reduced at 3 min after NG. Reductions in CBFV of -12.5 ± 3.8 cm/s were seen after NG, but a reduction in the Doppler resistance index suggested dilation of the middle cerebral artery with no differences after HDBR. The femoral artery dilated with NG and blood flow was reduced ∼50% with the appearance of large negative waves suggesting a marked increase in downstream resistance, but there were no effects of HDBR. In general, responses of women to NG were not altered by HDBR; the greater increase in HR in CON but not EX was probably a consequence of cardiovascular deconditioning. These results contrast with the hypothesis and a previous investigation of men after HDBR by revealing no change in cardiovascular responses to exogenous nitric oxide.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2012

Cardiovascular responses to lower body negative pressure before and after 4 h of head-down bed rest and seated control in men and women

Heather Edgell; Anna Grinberg; Nathalie Gagne; Keith R. Beavers; Richard L. Hughson

Cardiovascular deconditioning after a 4-h head-down bed rest (HDBR) might be a consequence of the time of day relative to pre-HDBR testing, or simply 4 h of confinement and inactivity rather than the posture change. Ten men and 11 women were studied during lower body negative pressure (LBNP) before and after 4-h HDBR and 4-h seated posture (SEAT) as a control for time of day and physical inactivity effects to test the hypotheses that cardiovascular deconditioning was a consequence of the HDBR posture, and that women would have a greater deconditioning response. Following HDBR, men and women had lower blood volume, higher heart rate with a greater increase during LBNP, a greater decrease of stroke volume during LBNP, lower central venous pressure, smaller inferior vena cava diameter, higher portal vein resistance index with a greater increase during LBNP, but lower forearm vascular resistance, lower norepinephrine, and lower renin. Women had lower vasopressin and men had higher vasopressin after HDBR, and women had lower pelvic impedance and men higher pelvic impedance. Following SEAT, brachial vascular resistance was reduced, thoracic impedance was elevated, the reduction of central venous pressure during LBNP was changed, women had higher angiotensin II whereas men had lower levels, and pelvic impedance increased in women and decreased in men. Cardiovascular deconditioning was greater after 4-h HDBR than after SEAT. Women and men had similar responses for most cardiovascular variables in the present study that tested the responses to LBNP after short-duration HDBR compared with a control condition.


Archive | 2015

domainshumans: transfer gain in different frequency Cerebral pressure-flow relations in hypertensive

Ikechukwu Iloputaife; Lewis A. Lipsitz; Jorge M. Serrador; Farzaneh A. Sorond; Mitul Vyas; Margaret Gagnon; Yojiro Ogawa; Ken Aoki; Jitsu Kato; Ken-ichi Iwasaki; Andrew D. Robertson; Heather Edgell; Richard L. Hughson


Archive | 2015

during dynamic exercise in humans: influence of aging Regulation of middle cerebral artery blood velocity

James P. Fisher; Shigehiko Ogoh; Colin N. Young; Peter B. Raven; Jeremias Paul; Andrew D. Robertson; Heather Edgell; Richard L. Hughson; Igor D. Braz; Stefanie Keiser; Thomas Haider; Paul J. Fadel; Lauro C. Vianna; Shekhar H. Deo; Areum K. Jensen; Seth W. Holwerda


Archive | 2014

CALL FOR PAPERS Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Aging-New Mechanisms and Insights Assessing cerebrovascular autoregulation from critical closing pressure and resistance area product during upright posture in aging and hypertension

Andrew D. Robertson; Heather Edgell; Richard L. Hughson


Archive | 2008

Effects of NASA-Fluid Loading Protocol on Cardiovascular Responses to Orthostatic Stress

Anna Grinberg; Heather Edgell; Nathalie Gagne; Keith R. Beavers; Richard L. Hughson


Archive | 2008

Symposium Conclusion: Women's cardiovascular health after bed rest or space flight

Richard L. Hughson; Phillipe Arbeille; Kevin Shoemaker; Heather Edgell


Archive | 2008

Plasma volume and water/sodium balance differences due to sex and menstrual phase after 4 hours of head-down bed rest (HDBR).

Heather Edgell; Anna Grinberg; Keith R. Beavers; Nathalie Gagne; Julia Totosy de Zepetnek; Danielle K. Greaves; Richard L. Hughson


Archive | 2008

WISE-2005: Changes in cardiovascular variables due to increasing levels of adrenergic stimulation in women according to phase of menstruation. H. Edgell, D. Greaves, P. Arbeille, M-A. Custaud, R.L. Hughson.

Heather Edgell; Danielle K. Greaves; Marc-Antoine Custaud; Phillipe Arbeille; Richard L. Hughson

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J. K. Shoemaker

University of Western Ontario

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Kathryn Zuj

University of Waterloo

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Kevin Shoemaker

University of Western Ontario

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