Does passive forearm stretching increase muscle sympathetic nerve activity in healthy young adults?
11 healthy young adults, mean age 23±4 years, 9 men
Five sets of 1-minute passive forearm stretching, each separated by 15-s of rest
Optional time-matched control session
Muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) measured via peroneal microneurography (burst frequency and burst incidence)surrogate
Passive forearm stretching elicits robust, load-dependent increases in muscle sympathetic nerve activity in healthy humans, providing a practical model for probing mechanoreflex function.
Muscle mechanoreflex has long been considered to make, at most, a minimal contribution to human sympathetic activation, as previous studies of passive exercise have typically reported absent, small, or transient responses. Whether passive stretching alone can elicit a sustained increase in muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA), and whether such responses are dependent on mechanical load, remains unknown. We tested the hypothesis that passive forearm stretching is sufficient to activate the muscle mechanoreflex and provoke a load-dependent sympathetic response in healthy young adults. Eleven participants (9 men; 23±4 years) completed two sessions on separate days: an experimental session with five sets of 1-minute passive forearm stretching, each separated by 15-s of rest, and an optional time-matched control session. MSNA was recorded via peroneal microneurography, while cardiovascular variables were continuously monitored (ECG, finger arterial pressure, brachial sphygmomanometry). Passive stretching evoked robust increases in burst frequency (Δ10±2.2 bursts·min⁻¹, PPPP=0.029). Mechanoreflex-driven sympathoexcitation was accompanied by a rightward resetting of the spontaneous sympathetic baroreflex operating point, without alteration in reflex gain. All variables returned to baseline within 15-30 minutes of recovery. These findings provide the first direct evidence that passive forearm stretching elicits robust and sustained increases in MSNA in healthy humans, with responses exhibiting a clear load-dependent profile. Passive stretching thus emerges as a practical and physiologically robust model for probing mechanoreflex function and sympathetic regulation in humans.
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Georgia C. S. Lehnen
M. Araujo
Jhenny V. Neri
AJP Regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology
Queensland University of Technology
Universidade Federal de São Paulo
Universidade de Brasília
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Lehnen et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d894526c1944d70ce054c4 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.00021.2026
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