Brothers R Matthew, Haslund Mads L, Wray D Walter, Raven Peter B, Sander Mikael
Department of Integrative Physiology, University of North Texas Health Science Center, Fort Worth, TX 76107, USA, and Copenhagen Muscle Research Centre, Department of Cardiology, National Hospital, Blegdamsvej 9, DK-2100 Copenhagen O, Denmark.
J Physiol. 2006 Dec 1;577(Pt 2):727-37. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2006.113977. Epub 2006 Sep 14.
It is well established that metabolic inhibition of adrenergic vasoconstriction contributes to the maintenance of adequate perfusion to exercising skeletal muscle. However, little is known regarding nonadrenergic vasoconstriction during exercise. We tested the hypothesis that a non-adrenergic vasoconstrictor, angiotensin II (AngII), would be less sensitive to metabolic inhibition than an alpha1-agonist, phenylephrine (PE), in the exercising human thigh. In 11 healthy men, femoral blood flow (FBF, ultrasound Doppler and thermodilution) and blood pressure were evaluated during wide-ranging doses of intra-arterial (femoral) infusions of PE and AngII at rest and during two workloads of steady-state knee-extensor exercise (7 W and 27 W). At rest, the maximal decrease in femoral artery diameter (FAD) during AngII (9.0+/-0.2 to 8.4+/-0.4 mm) was markedly less than during PE (9.0+/-0.3 to 5.7+/-0.5 mm), whereas maximal reductions in FBF and femoral vascular conductance (FVC) were similar during AngII (FBF: -65+/-6 and FVC: -66+/-6%) and PE (-57+/-5 and -59+/-4%). During exercise, FAD was not changed by AngII, but moderately decreased by PE. The maximal reductions in FBF and FVC were blunted during exercise compared to rest for both AngII (7 W: -28+/-5 and -40+/-5%; 27 W: -15+/-4% and -29+/-5%) and PE (7 W: -30+/-4 and -37+/-6%; 27 W: -15+/-2 and -24+/-6%), with no significant differences between drugs. The major new findings are (1) an exercise-induced intensity-dependent metabolic attenuation of non-adrenergic vasoconstriction in the human leg; and (2) functional evidence that AngII-vasoconstriction is predominantly distal, whereas alpha1-vasoconstriction is proximal and distal within the muscle vascular bed of the human thigh.
肾上腺素能血管收缩的代谢抑制有助于维持运动骨骼肌的充足灌注,这一点已得到充分证实。然而,关于运动期间非肾上腺素能血管收缩的情况却知之甚少。我们测试了这样一个假设:在运动的人体大腿中,一种非肾上腺素能血管收缩剂——血管紧张素II(AngII),比α1激动剂去氧肾上腺素(PE)对代谢抑制的敏感性更低。在11名健康男性中,在静息状态以及两种稳态伸膝运动负荷(7瓦和27瓦)期间,通过股动脉内广泛剂量输注PE和AngII,评估股血流量(FBF,超声多普勒和热稀释法)和血压。静息时,AngII输注期间股动脉直径(FAD)的最大减小(从9.0±0.2毫米至8.4±0.4毫米)明显小于PE输注期间(从9.0±0.3毫米至5.7±0.5毫米),而AngII(FBF:-65±6,FVC:-66±6%)和PE(-57±5和-59±4%)期间FBF和股血管传导率(FVC)的最大降低相似。运动期间,AngII未改变FAD,但PE使其适度降低。与静息相比,运动期间AngII(7瓦:-28±5和-40±5%;27瓦:-15±4%和-29±5%)和PE(7瓦:-30±4和-37±6%;27瓦:-15±2和-24±6%)的FBF和FVC的最大降低均减弱,药物之间无显著差异。主要的新发现是:(1)运动引起人体腿部非肾上腺素能血管收缩的强度依赖性代谢减弱;(2)功能性证据表明,在人体大腿的肌肉血管床内,AngII血管收缩主要在远端,而α1血管收缩在近端和远端均有。