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Sympathetic determinants of resting blood pressure in males and females.

Discharge of postganglionic muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) is related poorly to blood pressure (BP) in adults. Whether neural measurements beyond the prevailing level of MSNA can account for interindividual differences in BP remains unclear. The current study sought to evaluate the relative contributions of sympathetic-BP transduction and sympathetic baroreflex gain on resting BP in young adults. Data were analyzed from 191 (77 females) young adults (18-39 years) who underwent continuous measurement of beat-to-beat BP (finger photoplethysmography), heart rate (electrocardiography), and fibular nerve MSNA (microneurography). Linear regression analyses were computed to determine associations between sympathetic-BP transduction (signal-averaging) or sympathetic baroreflex gain (threshold technique) and resting BP, before and after controlling for age, body mass index, and MSNA burst frequency. K-mean clustering was used to explore sympathetic phenotypes of BP control and consequential influence on resting BP. Sympathetic-BP transduction was unrelated to BP in males or females (both R 2  < 0.01; P > 0.67). Sympathetic baroreflex gain was positively associated with BP in males ( R 2  = 0.09, P < 0.01), but not in females ( R 2  < 0.01; P = 0.80), before and after controlling for age, body mass index, and MSNA burst frequency. K-means clustering identified a subset of participants with average resting MSNA, yet lower sympathetic-BP transduction and lower sympathetic baroreflex gain. This distinct subgroup presented with elevated BP in males ( P < 0.02), but not in females ( P = 0.10). Sympathetic-BP transduction is unrelated to resting BP, while the association between sympathetic baroreflex gain and resting BP in males reveals important sex differences in the sympathetic determination of resting BP. NEW & NOTEWORTHY In a sample of 191 normotensive young adults, we confirm that resting muscle sympathetic nerve activity is a poor predictor of resting blood pressure and now demonstrate that sympathetic baroreflex gain is associated with resting blood pressure in males but not females. In contrast, signal-averaged measures of sympathetic-blood pressure transduction are unrelated to resting blood pressure. These findings highlight sex differences in the neural regulation of blood pressure.

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