The present study investigated BP and HR responsiveness to standing in male and female Somali and White study participants. We report two novel findings. First, SAP and DAP responsiveness to standing was not different between racial or sex comparisons. Second, and despite the similar BP responses, HR responsiveness to standing differed between groups. Specifically, Somali females exhibited augmented HR responsiveness to standing compared to both Somali males and White females. This phenomenon was present in a large sample of Somali and White adults of similar age, BMI, and sex distribution. These findings suggest differences in autonomic cardiac control in Somali females, which may place this group at increased CVD risk.
While BP may modestly change with an orthostatic challenge via changes in blood distribution and peripheral sympathetic outflow, HR changes (often increased) represent an effort to maintain cardiac output and BP. Standing [18], head-up tilt [19], or lower body negative pressure (LBNP) [20] elicit reproducible increases in HR and decreased heart rate variability indicative of reduced cardiac vagal activation. However, augmented HR reactivity to orthostasis is related to future CVD risk [21]. Indeed, in our sample of Somali Americans, HR reactivity to one minute of quiet standing was highest in Somali females compared to both White females and Somali males. These data are comparable to those of Hinds and Stachenfeld who saw augmented HR increases in response to LBNP in African American females compared to White females, together with higher plasma norepinephrine at presyncope [17]. While such mechanisms may be advantageous during early life by offsetting issues such as orthostatic intolerance (common in White females), they may also be indicative of autonomic dysfunction/hyperactivity. This phenomenon, greater sympathetic drive, may conceivably place Somali females at increased risk for HTN and future end-stage CVD compared to White females.
Orthostatic BP assessment exhibits broad utility in regard to impaired BP regulation [22]. More commonly, orthostatic BP is used to examine hypotension in individuals who fail to mitigate a fall in BP upon standing [23]. Conversely, BP may also increase during an orthostatic challenge. In a large sample of over 1,200 adults from the Hypertension and Ambulatory Recording Venetia Study, participants who increased BP during orthostatic challenge by > 6.5 mmHg (SAP) exhibited a nearly two-fold increased risk of major cardiovascular events compared to normal BP responders to standing [24]. While ΔSAP was similar across groups, DAP reactivity approached significance (Interaction: p = 0.090) perhaps driven by attenuated DAP increase in Somali males. While caution is warranted so as to not overinterpret these data, arterial stiffness may also be influential in this relationship in both sexes. Reduced basal vascular compliance may facilitate greater orthostatic responses from poor elastic recoil to preserve diastolic flow and result in an increased standing tachycardic response. In previous data from our laboratory, Somali Americans exhibited heightened arterial stiffness via 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring compared to White adults (data pending publication). Further work is needed to elucidate potential sex differences in arterial stiffness within the Somali American community.
Measuring orthostatic BP and HR for clinical practice can be utilized to rule out potential masked HTN, which is defined as an elevated mean daytime ambulatory BP in the presence of normal or non-elevated clinic blood pressures [25]. Epidemiological evidence from the Masked HTN study shows that 15% of the majority White study sample exhibited masked HTN [26]. In comparison, in a sample of 972 African Americans from the Jackson Heart Study, masked HTN prevalence was over two-fold higher at 34% of the study sample [27, 28]. Such a phenomenon may help explain cardiovascular health disparities within the African American community and may extend to Somali Americans. While we cannot comment on masked HTN in our younger Somali American population, the observed evidence within the African American community, in conjunction with our orthostatic HR responsiveness in Somali females, suggests that masked HTN may be prevalent within the Somali American community. Further, examination of orthostatic BP and HR in the Somali American community may offer utility to alleviate CVD burden within these populations via earlier intervention (behavioral or pharmacological).
While this hypothesis-generating study has multiple strengths including large sample size and majority disease free participants, it is not without limitations. Presumed autonomic dysfunction in Somali females should be confirmed using gold-standard techniques like microneurography in a Somali American sample free of disease and medication use. Indeed, a percentage of our sample exhibited diagnosed disease, but this limitation is mitigated by inclusion of a majority of disease- and medication-free Somali and White study participants.
Growing evidence suggests Somali Americans may be at increased risk for CVD, but investigation of potential CVD mechanisms in this population is completely absent. Our present study shows heightened HR reactivity to a one-minute orthostatic challenge (standing) in younger Somali females. These findings suggest that while younger Somali females may be at lower risk for orthostatic intolerance from hypothesized higher sympathetic drive, this may contribute to greater CVD risk with age.