Saunders Natasha R, Dinenno Frank A, Pyke Kyra E, Rogers Anna M, Tschakovsky Michael E
School of Physical and Health Education, Queen's University, 69 Union St., Kingston, Ontario, Canada K7L 3N6.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2005 Jan;288(1):H214-20. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.00762.2004. Epub 2004 Sep 2.
We tested the hypothesis that nitric oxide (NO) and prostaglandins (PGs) contribute to the rapid vasodilation that accompanies a transition from mild to moderate exercise. Nine healthy volunteers (2 women and 7 men) lay supine with forearm at heart level. Subjects were instrumented for continuous brachial artery infusion of saline (control condition) or combined infusion of N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) and ketorolac (drug condition) to inhibit NO synthase and cyclooxygenase, respectively. A step increase from 5 min of steady-state mild (5.4 kg) rhythmic, dynamic forearm handgrip exercise (1 s of contraction followed by 2 s of relaxation) to moderate (10.9 kg) exercise for 30 s was performed. Steady-state forearm blood flow (FBF; Doppler ultrasound) and forearm vascular conductance (FVC) were attenuated in drug compared with saline (control) treatment: FBF = 196.8 +/- 30.8 vs. 281.4 +/- 34.3 ml/min and FVC = 179.3 +/- 29.4 vs. 277.8 +/- 34.8 ml.min(-1).100 mmHg(-1) (both P < 0.01). FBF and FVC increased from steady state after release of the initial contraction at the higher workload in saline and drug conditions: DeltaFBF = 72.4 +/- 8.7 and 52.9 +/- 7.8 ml/min, respectively, and DeltaFVC = 66.3 +/- 7.3 and 44.1 +/- 7.0 ml.min(-1).100 mmHg(-1), respectively (all P < 0.05). The percent DeltaFBF and DeltaFVC were not different during saline infusion or combined inhibition of NO and PGs: DeltaFBF = 27.2 +/- 3.1 and 28.1 +/- 3.8%, respectively (P = 0.78) and DeltaFVC = 25.7 +/- 3.2 and 26.0 +/- 4.0%, respectively (P = 0.94). The data suggest that NO and vasodilatory PGs are not obligatory for rapid vasodilation at the onset of a step increase from mild- to moderate-intensity forearm exercise. Additional vasodilatory mechanisms not dependent on NO and PG release contribute to the immediate and early increase in blood flow in an exercise-to-exercise transition.
一氧化氮(NO)和前列腺素(PGs)促成了从轻度运动过渡到中度运动时伴随的快速血管舒张。九名健康志愿者(2名女性和7名男性)仰卧,前臂与心脏处于同一水平。受试者被安装仪器,以便连续向肱动脉输注生理盐水(对照条件)或联合输注N(G)-硝基-L-精氨酸甲酯(L-NAME)和酮咯酸(药物条件),分别抑制一氧化氮合酶和环氧化酶。从5分钟的稳态轻度(5.4千克)有节奏的动态前臂握力运动(收缩1秒,随后放松2秒)逐步增加到中度(10.9千克)运动,持续30秒。与生理盐水(对照)治疗相比,药物治疗使稳态前臂血流量(FBF;多普勒超声)和前臂血管传导率(FVC)降低:FBF = 196.8±30.8对281.4±34.3毫升/分钟,FVC = 179.3±29.4对277.8±34.8毫升·分钟⁻¹·100毫米汞柱⁻¹(两者P < 0.01)。在生理盐水和药物条件下,在较高负荷下初始收缩解除后,FBF和FVC从稳态增加:ΔFBF分别为72.4±8.7和52.9±7.8毫升/分钟,ΔFVC分别为66.3±7.3和44.1±7.0毫升·分钟⁻¹·100毫米汞柱⁻¹(均P < 0.05)。在输注生理盐水或联合抑制NO和PGs期间,ΔFBF和ΔFVC的百分比没有差异:ΔFBF分别为27.2±3.1和28.1±3.8%(P = 0.78),ΔFVC分别为25.7±3.2和26.0±4.0%(P = 0.94)。数据表明,在从轻度到中度强度的前臂运动逐步增加开始时,快速血管舒张并不一定需要NO和血管舒张性PGs。不依赖于NO和PG释放的其他血管舒张机制有助于运动到运动过渡期间血流量的即刻和早期增加。