Van Duijnhoven Noortje T L, Janssen Thomas W J, Green Daniel J, Minson Christopher T, Hopman Maria T E, Thijssen Dick H J
Research Institute for Sport and Exercise Science, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2009 Apr;106(4):1065-71. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.91611.2008. Epub 2009 Feb 19.
Spinal cord injury (SCI) induces vascular adaptations below the level of the lesion, such as impaired cutaneous vasodilation. However, the mechanisms underlying these differences are unclear. The aim of this study is to examine arm and leg cutaneous vascular conductance (CVC) responses to local heating in 17 able-bodied controls (39 +/- 13 yr) and 18 SCI subjects (42 +/- 8 yr). SCI subjects were counterbalanced for functional electrostimulation (FES) cycling exercise (SCI-EX, n = 9) or control (SCI-C, n = 9) and reanalyzed after 8 wk. Arm and leg skin blood flow were measured by laser-Doppler flowmetry during local heating (42 degrees C), resulting in an axon-reflex mediated first peak, nadir, and a primarily nitric oxide-dependent plateau phase. Data were expressed as a percentage of maximal CVC (44 degrees C). CVC responses to local heating in the paralyzed leg, but also in the forearm of SCI subjects, were lower than in able-bodied controls (P < 0.05 and 0.01, respectively). The 8-wk intervention did not change forearm and leg CVC responses to local heating in SCI-C and SCI-EX, but increased femoral artery diameter in SCI-EX (P < 0.05). Interestingly, findings in skin microvessels contrast with conduit arteries, where physical (in)activity contributes to adaptations in SCI. The lower CVC responses in the paralyzed legs might suggest a role for inactivity in SCI, but the presence of impaired CVC responses in the normally active forearm suggests other mechanisms. This is supported by a lack of adaptation in skin microcirculation after FES cycle training. This might relate to the less frequent and smaller magnitude of skin blood flow responses to heat stimuli, compared with controls, than physical inactivity per se.
脊髓损伤(SCI)会引发损伤平面以下的血管适应性变化,比如皮肤血管舒张功能受损。然而,这些差异背后的机制尚不清楚。本研究旨在检测17名健康对照者(39±13岁)和18名脊髓损伤受试者(42±8岁)的手臂和腿部皮肤血管传导性(CVC)对局部加热的反应。脊髓损伤受试者被平衡分为功能性电刺激(FES)循环运动组(SCI-EX,n = 9)或对照组(SCI-C,n = 9),8周后重新进行分析。在局部加热(42℃)过程中,通过激光多普勒血流仪测量手臂和腿部皮肤血流量,从而产生轴突反射介导的第一个峰值、最低点以及主要依赖一氧化氮的平台期。数据以最大CVC(44℃)的百分比表示。脊髓损伤受试者瘫痪腿部以及前臂对局部加热的CVC反应低于健康对照者(分别为P < 0.05和0.01)。8周的干预并未改变SCI-C组和SCI-EX组前臂和腿部对局部加热的CVC反应,但增加了SCI-EX组股动脉直径(P < 0.05)。有趣的是,皮肤微血管的研究结果与传导动脉形成对比,在传导动脉中,身体活动(不活动)会导致脊髓损伤后的适应性变化。瘫痪腿部较低的CVC反应可能表明不活动在脊髓损伤中起作用,但正常活动的前臂中存在CVC反应受损表明还有其他机制。FES循环训练后皮肤微循环缺乏适应性变化支持了这一点。这可能与热刺激引起的皮肤血流反应频率较低、幅度较小有关,与对照组相比,而非单纯的身体不活动。