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Systemic and cerebral circulatory adjustment within the first 60 s after active standing: An integrative physiological view.

Transient cardiovascular and cerebrovascular responses within the first minute of active standing provide the means to assess autonomic, cardiovascular and cerebrovascular regulation using a real-world everyday stimulus. Traditionally, these responses have been used to detect autonomic dysfunction, and to identify the hemodynamic correlates of patient symptoms and attributable causes of (pre)syncope and falls. This review addresses the physiology of systemic and cerebrovascular adjustment within the first 60 s after active standing. Mechanical factors induced by standing up cause a temporal mismatch between cardiac output and vascular conductance which leads to an initial blood pressure drops with a nadir around 10 s. The arterial baroreflex counteracts these initial blood pressure drops, but needs 2-3 s to be initiated with a maximal effect occurring at 10 s after standing while, in parallel, cerebral autoregulation buffers these changes within 10 s to maintain adequate cerebral perfusion. Interestingly, both the magnitude of the initial drop and these compensatory mechanisms are thought to be quite well-preserved in healthy aging. It is hoped that the present review serves as a reference for future pathophysiological investigations and epidemiological studies. Further experimental research is needed to unravel the causal mechanisms underlying the emergence of symptoms and relationship with aging and adverse outcomes in variants of orthostatic hypotension.

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