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  lüll Behavior of central and peripheral chemoreflexes in heart failure Guimaraes GV; Belli JF; Bacal F; Bocchi EAArq Bras Cardiol  2011[Feb]; 96 (2): 161-7The heart failure (HF) syndrome can be defined as the final pathway of any type  of heart disease. The sympatho-inhibitory cardiovascular reflexes, such as the  arterial baroreceptor reflex, are significantly decreased in HF. Patients with HF  present higher ventilation for a certain workload when compared with normal  individuals. This fact generates low ventilatory efficiency and is related to  higher ventilation associated with the carbon dioxide production, which is a  predictor of bad prognosis, in addition to being a limiting factor for the  practice of exercises. There is evidence that the autonomic imbalance contributes  to the pathogenesis and the progression of heart failure. The chemoreflexes are  the main mechanisms of control and regulation of the ventilatory responses to the  changes in concentrations of arterial oxygen and carbon dioxide. The chemoreflex  activation causes an increase in the sympathetic activity, heart rate, arterial  pressure and minute volume. However, the increase in the minute volume and the  arterial pressure, due to negative feedback, cause inhibition of the sympathetic  response at the chemoreflex activation. In spite of the functional alterations of  the reflexes, their behavior in normal and pathological conditions, especially  their contribution to the sympathoexcitatory state observed in HF has not been  broadly studied. Therefore, this review aims at integrating the knowledge on  central and peripheral chemoreflexes in HF syndrome, as well as clarifying the  influence of the heart failure drug therapy on the chemoreflexes.|Baroreflex/drug effects/*physiology[MESH]|Chemoreceptor Cells/metabolism/*physiology[MESH]|Heart Failure/metabolism/*physiopathology[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Sympathetic Nervous System/drug effects/*physiology[MESH] |