Luu Billy L, Fitzpatrick Richard C
B. L. Luu: Neuroscience Research Australia, Barker St, Randwick, NSW 2031, Australia.
J Physiol. 2013 Nov 1;591(21):5401-12. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2013.261107. Epub 2013 Sep 9.
These studies investigate the relationships between perfusion pressure, force output and pressor responses for the contracting human tibialis anterior muscle. Eight healthy adults were studied. Changing the height of tibialis anterior relative to the heart was used to control local perfusion pressure. Electrically stimulated tetanic force output was highly sensitive to physiological variations in perfusion pressure showing a proportionate change in force output of 6.5% per 10 mmHg. This perfusion-dependent change in contractility begins within seconds and is reversible with a 53 s time constant, demonstrating a steady-state equilibrium between contractility and perfusion pressure. These stimulated contractions did not produce significant cardiovascular responses, indicating that the muscle pressor response does not play a major role in cardiovascular regulation at these workloads. Voluntary contractions at forces that would require constant motor drive if perfusion pressure had remained constant generated a central pressor response when perfusion pressure was lowered. This is consistent with a larger cortical drive being required to compensate for the lost contractility with lower perfusion pressure. The relationship between contractility and perfusion for this large postural muscle was not different from that of a small hand muscle (adductor pollicis) and it responded similarly to passive peripheral and active central changes in arterial pressure, but extended over a wider operating range of pressures. If we consider that, in a goal-oriented motor task, muscle contractility determines central motor output and the central pressor response, these results indicate that muscle would fatigue twice as fast without a pressor response. From its extent, timing and reversibility we propose a testable hypothesis that this change in contractility arises through contraction- and perfusion-dependent changes in interstitial K(+) concentration.
这些研究调查了收缩状态下的人体胫骨前肌灌注压力、力输出和升压反应之间的关系。对8名健康成年人进行了研究。通过改变胫骨前肌相对于心脏的高度来控制局部灌注压力。电刺激强直力输出对灌注压力的生理变化高度敏感,每10 mmHg灌注压力变化,力输出相应变化6.5%。这种与灌注相关的收缩性变化在数秒内开始,并以53秒的时间常数可逆,表明收缩性与灌注压力之间存在稳态平衡。这些刺激收缩未产生显著的心血管反应,表明在这些工作负荷下,肌肉升压反应在心血管调节中不发挥主要作用。当灌注压力降低时,在如果灌注压力保持恒定则需要持续运动驱动的力下进行的自主收缩会产生中枢升压反应。这与需要更大的皮质驱动来补偿较低灌注压力下丧失的收缩性一致。这块大型姿势肌的收缩性与灌注之间的关系与小型手部肌肉(拇收肌)并无不同,并且它对动脉压的被动外周变化和主动中枢变化的反应相似,但压力的工作范围更广。如果我们认为,在一项目标导向的运动任务中,肌肉收缩性决定中枢运动输出和中枢升压反应,那么这些结果表明,如果没有升压反应,肌肉疲劳速度将加快一倍。从其程度、时间和可逆性来看,我们提出一个可检验的假设,即这种收缩性变化是通过间质K(+)浓度的收缩和灌注依赖性变化产生的。