Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia, USA.
Diabetes Metab Syndr Obes. 2010 Aug 4;3:275-80. doi: 10.2147/dmsott.s12136.
It is well known that a number of locally released vasodilatory and vasoconstrictive compounds can affect skin perfusion. This study investigated the effects of aerobic training on the contribution of nitric oxide (NO), prostaglandins (PG), and endothelial-derived hyperpolarizing factor (EDHF) in stimulated dorsal foot skin perfusion in individuals with type 2 diabetes (T2DM). Ten previously sedentary, older individuals with T2DM (57.0 ± 3.1 years) and nine sedentary controls (53.5 ± 3.2 years) were tested before and after undertaking six months of moderate aerobic training three times weekly in a supervised setting. All subjects underwent measurement of baseline (32°C) and heat-stimulated (40°C and 44°C) dorsal foot skin perfusion starting one hour after ingestion of a single, oral 325 mg dose of aspirin, a known inhibitor of PG synthesis. Before aspirin ingestion, a subcutaneous microdialysis probe was inserted into each foot dorsum to administer either saline (PG pathway only blocked by aspirin in the left foot) or L-NAME (N(G)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester; thereby inhibiting both PG and NO pathways in the right foot). Normative data collected previously on subjects undergoing saline administration via microdialysis without aspirin ingestion served as a control group. Significantly lower responsiveness of maximal perfusion was found with the EDHF pathway alone unblocked compared with NO and EDHF unblocked after training. Maximal suppression attributable directly to NO, PG, and EDHF was not significantly different when examined by subject group and training status. However, contributions of NO, PG, and EDHF to maximal perfusion were significantly increased, decreased, and unchanged by aerobic training, respectively, with diabetic and control subjects combined due to nonsignificant differences between groups. Improvements in maximally stimulated dorsal foot skin perfusion resulting from six months of aerobic training appear to have primarily an NO basis, with lesser contributions from PG following training, regardless of diabetes status.
众所周知,许多局部释放的血管舒张和血管收缩化合物可以影响皮肤灌注。本研究调查了有氧运动对一氧化氮(NO)、前列腺素(PG)和内皮衍生超极化因子(EDHF)在 2 型糖尿病(T2DM)个体刺激足部皮肤灌注中的贡献的影响。10 名先前久坐不动的老年 T2DM 患者(57.0±3.1 岁)和 9 名久坐不动的对照组(53.5±3.2 岁)在监督环境中每周三次进行 6 个月适度有氧运动后接受了测试。所有受试者在单次口服 325mg 剂量阿司匹林后 1 小时开始测量足部皮肤基线(32°C)和热刺激(40°C 和 44°C)的灌注,阿司匹林是一种已知的 PG 合成抑制剂。在摄入阿司匹林之前,将皮下微透析探针插入每个足背,以在左侧足部给予生理盐水(仅通过阿司匹林阻断 PG 途径)或 L-NAME(N(G)-硝基-L-精氨酸甲酯;从而在右侧足部同时抑制 PG 和 NO 途径)。先前在未摄入阿司匹林的情况下通过微透析给予生理盐水的受试者收集的正常数据作为对照组。与训练后 NO 和 EDHF 未阻断相比,仅 EDHF 途径未阻断时最大灌注的反应性显著降低。通过受试者组和训练状态检查时,直接归因于 NO、PG 和 EDHF 的最大抑制没有显著差异。然而,NO、PG 和 EDHF 对最大灌注的贡献分别在糖尿病和对照组受试者合并时由于组间无显著差异而分别显著增加、减少和不变。由于有氧运动训练,最大刺激的足部皮肤灌注的改善似乎主要基于 NO,并且在训练后 PG 的贡献较小,无论糖尿病状态如何。