Seals D R, Victor R G
Exerc Sport Sci Rev. 1991;19:313-49.
Recent investigations using direct (microneurographic) recordings of MSNA have provided a substantial amount of new information on the regulation of sympathetic nervous system control of nonactive skeletal muscle blood flow during exercise in humans. Some of the new conclusions from these studies discussed in this review include: 1. The direction, pattern and magnitude of the MSNA response to exercise depend on the collective influence of a number of factors, including the mode (isometric or rhythmic), intensity, and duration of the exercise, the size of the contracting muscle mass, and possibly the level of conditioning (physical training) of the exercising muscles. The MSNA response also appears to be tightly coupled with the onset and progression of muscle fatigue, at least during sustained, isometric contractions. 2. Increases in MSNA evoked during exercise with the arms are fairly uniform among different skeletal muscle nerves, and these responses correlate strongly with changes in venous plasma norepinephrine concentrations, limb vascular resistance and arterial blood pressure. Thus, increases in this neural activity during exercise are associated with the expected physiological responses. 3. The MSNA response to the same level of exercise varies markedly among healthy subjects but appears to be consistent over time within a particular subject. 4. The muscle metaboreflex (muscle chemoreflex) is the primary-mechanism by which MSNA is stimulated during small-muscle, isometric exercise in humans. In contrast, central command has a relatively weak influence on MSNA during this type of exercise. 5. Muscle metaboreflex-stimulation of MSNA also occurs during dynamic exercise, but only at or above moderate, submaximal intensities (i.e., not during mild exercise). 6. Muscle metaboreflex-evoked increases in MSNA during exercise are strongly associated with glycogenolysis and the consequent cellular accumulation of hydrogen ions in the contracting muscles. 7. Sympathoinhibitory cardiopulmonary reflexes do not appear to modulate the MSNA responses to isometric exercise in the healthy human. However, arterial baroreflexes exert a potent inhibitory effect on MSNA during this form of exercise. The mechanisms involved in the regulation of MSNA during large-muscle, dynamic leg exercise is an important topic for future investigations, as is the relationship between MSNA and sympathetic outflow to other regional circulations (e.g., heart, viscera, skin) during various forms of exercise.
近期利用对肌肉交感神经活动(MSNA)进行直接(微神经图)记录的研究,提供了大量关于人体运动期间非活动骨骼肌血流的交感神经系统调控的新信息。本综述中讨论的这些研究得出的一些新结论包括:1. MSNA对运动的反应方向、模式和幅度取决于多种因素的综合影响,包括运动模式(等长或节律性)、强度、持续时间、收缩肌肉量的大小,以及可能的运动肌肉的训练水平(体育锻炼)。至少在持续的等长收缩过程中,MSNA反应似乎也与肌肉疲劳的发生和进展紧密相关。2. 运动期间,手臂运动诱发的MSNA增加在不同的骨骼肌神经中相当一致,并且这些反应与静脉血浆去甲肾上腺素浓度、肢体血管阻力和动脉血压的变化密切相关。因此,运动期间这种神经活动的增加与预期的生理反应相关。3. 健康受试者对相同运动水平的MSNA反应差异显著,但在特定受试者中随时间似乎是一致的。4. 肌肉代谢反射(肌肉化学反射)是人体小肌肉等长运动期间刺激MSNA的主要机制。相比之下,在此类运动期间,中枢指令对MSNA的影响相对较弱。5. 在动态运动期间也会发生肌肉代谢反射对MSNA的刺激,但仅在中等或高于中等的次最大强度时出现(即轻度运动期间不会出现)。6. 运动期间肌肉代谢反射诱发的MSNA增加与糖原分解以及收缩肌肉中随之而来的氢离子细胞内积累密切相关。7. 心肺交感抑制反射似乎不会调节健康人对等长运动的MSNA反应。然而,在这种运动形式中,动脉压力反射对MSNA发挥强大的抑制作用。大肌肉动态腿部运动期间MSNA调控所涉及的机制是未来研究的一个重要课题,MSNA与各种形式运动期间对其他区域循环(如心脏、内脏、皮肤)的交感神经输出之间的关系也是如此。