Schreuder Tim H A, van Lotringen Jaap H, Hopman Maria T E, Thijssen Dick H J
Department of Physiology, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Department of Physiology, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Nijmegen, The Netherlands Research Institute for Sports and Exercise Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, UK
Exp Physiol. 2014 Sep;99(9):1253-64. doi: 10.1113/expphysiol.2013.077297. Epub 2014 May 16.
Positive vascular effects of exercise training are mediated by acute increases in blood flow. Type 2 diabetes patients show attenuated exercise-induced increases in blood flow, possibly mediated by the endothelin pathway, preventing an optimal stimulus for vascular adaptation. We examined the impact of endothelin receptor blockade (bosentan) on exercise-induced blood flow in the brachial artery and on pre- and postexercise endothelial function in type 2 diabetes patients (n = 9, 60 ± 7 years old) and control subjects (n = 10, 60 ± 5 years old). Subjects reported twice to the laboratory to perform hand-grip exercise in the presence of endothelin receptor blockade or placebo. We examined brachial artery endothelial function (via flow-mediated dilatation) before and after exercise, as well as blood flow during exercise. Endothelin receptor blockade resulted in a larger increase in blood flow during exercise in type 2 diabetes patients (P = 0.046), but not in control subjects (P = 0.309). Exercise increased shear rate across the exercise protocol, unaffected by endothelin receptor blockade. Exercise did not alter brachial artery diameter in either group, but endothelin receptor blockade resulted in a larger brachial artery diameter in type 2 diabetes patients (P = 0.033). Exercise significantly increased brachial artery flow-mediated dilatation in both groups, unaffected by endothelin receptor blockade. Endothelin receptor blockade increased exercise-induced brachial artery blood flow in type 2 diabetes patients, but not in control subjects. Despite this effect of endothelin receptor blockade on blood flow, we found no impact on baseline or post-exercise endothelial function in type 2 diabetes patients or control subjects, possibly related to normalization of the shear stimulus during exercise. The successful increase in blood flow during exercise in type 2 diabetes patients through endothelin receptor blockade may have beneficial effects in repeated exercise training.
运动训练对血管的积极作用是由血流量的急性增加介导的。2型糖尿病患者运动诱导的血流量增加减弱,可能由内皮素途径介导,从而阻止了血管适应的最佳刺激。我们研究了内皮素受体阻断剂(波生坦)对2型糖尿病患者(n = 9,60±7岁)和对照组(n = 10,60±5岁)运动诱导的肱动脉血流量以及运动前后内皮功能的影响。受试者两次到实验室,在使用内皮素受体阻断剂或安慰剂的情况下进行握力运动。我们检测了运动前后肱动脉内皮功能(通过血流介导的扩张)以及运动期间的血流量。内皮素受体阻断剂使2型糖尿病患者运动期间的血流量增加幅度更大(P = 0.046),但对对照组无此作用(P = 0.309)。在整个运动过程中,运动增加了剪切率,不受内皮素受体阻断剂的影响。运动在两组中均未改变肱动脉直径,但内皮素受体阻断剂使2型糖尿病患者的肱动脉直径更大(P = 0.033)。运动显著增加了两组肱动脉血流介导的扩张,不受内皮素受体阻断剂的影响。内皮素受体阻断剂增加了2型糖尿病患者运动诱导的肱动脉血流量,但对对照组无此作用。尽管内皮素受体阻断剂对血流量有此作用,但我们发现其对2型糖尿病患者或对照组的基线或运动后内皮功能无影响,这可能与运动期间剪切刺激的正常化有关。通过内皮素受体阻断剂成功增加2型糖尿病患者运动期间的血流量可能对重复运动训练有有益影响。