Gender based alteration in autonomic activity in young adults


Original Article

Author Details : Sabita Yograj, Geetika Gupta, Mumtaz, Anjali Nadir Bhat, Rajiv Kumar Gupta

Volume : 3, Issue : 2, Year : 2016

Article Page : 155-160


Suggest article by email

Get Permission

Abstract

The autonomic nervous system is a division of peripheral nervous system that controls automated body functions like heart rate, blood pressure, digestion and metabolism. Women have been seen to have lower cardiovascular risk and this is believed to be because of the regulatory influence of oestrogen on autonomic nervous system. The current study was conducted on 326 healthy medical students, 163 each of both sexes, in age group of 19 to 25 years, divided into Group-1 (males) and Group-2 (females). The parameters recorded and tests used were pulse rate, standing to lying ratio, 30:15 ratio, valsalva ratio and expiratory-inspiratory ratio for assessment of parasympathetic activity and pulse rate, blood pressure, orthostasis, cold pressor test, mental arithmetic test and corrected QT interval for assessment of sympathetic activity. Our findings show that young adult females have lower parasympathetic activity as compared to males of the same age group, who have a higher sympathetic activity.

Keywords: Autonomic nervous system, Parasympathetic activity, Sympathetic activity


How to cite : Yograj S, Gupta G, Mumtaz, Bhat A N, Gupta R K, Gender based alteration in autonomic activity in young adults. Indian J Clin Anat Physiol 2016;3(2):155-160


This is an Open Access (OA) journal, and articles are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as appropriate credit is given and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.







View Article

PDF File  


Copyright permission

Get article permission for commercial use

Downlaod

PDF File    






Article Access statistics

Viewed: 1346

PDF Downloaded: 529