%0 Journal Article %T Systems physiology of the baroreflex during orthostatic stress: from animals to humans %A Atsunori Kamiya %J Frontiers in Physiology %D 2014 %I Frontiers Media %R 10.3389/fphys.2014.00256 %X The baroreflex is a key mechanism involved in the control of arterial pressure (AP) during orthostasis in humans. However, the baroreflex is a closed-loop feedback system, from baroreceptor pressure input to systemic AP, and therefore requires open-loop experiments to identify its system characteristics. The requirement limits our ability to identify baroreflex system characteristics in humans. Open-loop research in animals has revealed dynamic and static characteristics of the two baroreflex subsystems: the neural and peripheral arcs. The neural arc, from baroreceptor pressure input to sympathetic nerve activity (SNA), has high-pass dynamic characteristics, indicating that more rapid change in input AP causes greater response in SNA. In contrast, the peripheral arc, from SNA input to systemic AP, has low-pass characteristics. Orthostasis increases the gain of the neural arc, which compensates for the lower transfer gain of the peripheral arc and in turn maintains total baroreflex function. Here, I discuss the possibility that baroreflex subsystem characteristics identified in animals can be applicable to the human sympathetic response to orthostasis, with a focus on loading speed-dependence of orthostatic sympathetic activation. %K baroreflexes %K systems analysis %K sympathetic nerve activity %K Autonomic Nervous System %K Integrative Physiology %U http://www.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fphys.2014.00256/abstract