HAEMODYNAMIC RESPONSE TO POSTURAL STRESS IN THE ELDERLY WITH AND WITHOUT POSTURAL HYPOTENSION

Abstract
The haemodynamic response to postural stress (60° foot-down tilt) was measured by impedance cardiography in six elderly cardiovascular-normal patients and 39 with symptomatic postural hypotension (systolic blood pressure drop ≥ 20 mmHg or more). In the normal elderly the mean increase in heart rate, fall in blood pressure and cardiac output, and rise in peripheral resistance was less than that described in younger subjects. The changes were at their maximum in 1 min, and there was little further change over the next 5 min. In those with postural hypotension, orthostatic reduction (or failure to rise) of the peripheral resistance was the mechanism in 83% of cases, whatever the cause, and the time course of the haemodynamic changes was the same in the majority as in the normals. Serial tests in patients whose postural hypotension was controlled (by cessation of causal drugs, often multiple, by fludrocortisone, or by dihydroergotamine) showed return to normal.