OBJECTIVES: We tested whether acute coronary occlusion interferes with arterial baroreceptor control of heart rate in humans. BACKGROUND: Subnormal baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) is an important risk indicator for sudden death. Animal research indicates that both chronic myocardial infarction and acute coronary occlusion impair baroreflex modulation of heart rate. METHODS: We measured RR interval prolongation after phenylephrine-induced systolic pressure increases before and during 2-min coronary occlusions in 47 patients (27 men) undergoing clinically indicated single-vessel coronary angioplasty for stenoses in the proximal or midportion of the vessel causing >50% reduction in the arterial diameter, with normal antegrade flow (33 anterior descending, 10 circumflex, 4 right coronary artery). A control group of 11 patients treated for chronic total occlusion of a coronary artery was assessed to evaluate nonspecific changes in baroreflex function during a 2-min balloon inflation in the occluded artery. RESULTS: The BRS decreased from 5.2+/-3.8 (mean+/-SD) to 4.1+/-3.5 ms x mm Hg(-1) (p=0.01) during the coronary occlusion in the 28 patients with preserved arterial baroreceptor control of heart rate-that is, adequate blood pressure responses and correlation coefficients of the slopes both in baseline and during coronary occlusion. The same phenylephrine dose increased systolic pressure less during than before coronary artery occlusion (21+/-21 versus 36+/-16 mm Hg, p