Fujii Naoto, McGinn Ryan, Paull Gabrielle, Stapleton Jill M, Meade Robert D, Kenny Glen P
Human and Environmental Physiology Research Unit, School of Human Kinetics, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Human and Environmental Physiology Research Unit, School of Human Kinetics, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2014 Nov 1;117(9):1055-62. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00644.2014. Epub 2014 Sep 11.
Cholinergic agents (e.g., methacholine) induce cutaneous vasodilation and sweating. Reports indicate that either nitric oxide (NO), cyclooxygenase (COX), or both can contribute to cholinergic cutaneous vasodilation. Also, NO is reportedly involved in cholinergic sweating; however, whether COX contributes to cholinergic sweating is unclear. Forearm sweat rate (ventilated capsule) and cutaneous vascular conductance (CVC, laser-Doppler perfusion units/mean arterial pressure) were evaluated in 10 healthy young (24 ± 4 yr) adults (7 men, 3 women) at four skin sites that were continuously perfused via intradermal microdialysis with 1) lactated Ringer (control), 2) 10 mM ketorolac (a nonselective COX inhibitor), 3) 10 mM N(G)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (l-NAME, a nonselective NO synthase inhibitor), or 4) a combination of 10 mM ketorolac + 10 mM l-NAME. At the four skin sites, methacholine was simultaneously infused in a dose-dependent manner (1, 10, 100, 1,000, 2,000 mM). Relative to the control site, forearm CVC was not influenced by ketorolac throughout the protocol (all P > 0.05), whereas l-NAME and ketorolac + l-NAME reduced forearm CVC at and above 10 mM methacholine (all P < 0.05). Conversely, there was no main effect of treatment site (P = 0.488) and no interaction of methacholine dose and treatment site (P = 0.711) on forearm sweating. Thus forearm sweating (in mg·min(-1)·cm(-2)) from baseline up to the maximal dose of methacholine was not different between the four sites (at 2,000 mM, control 0.50 ± 0.23, ketorolac 0.44 ± 0.23, l-NAME 0.51 ± 0.22, and ketorolac + l-NAME 0.51 ± 0.23). We show that both NO synthase and COX inhibition do not influence cholinergic sweating induced by 1-2,000 mM methacholine.
胆碱能药物(如乙酰甲胆碱)可引起皮肤血管舒张和出汗。报告表明,一氧化氮(NO)、环氧化酶(COX)或两者都可能参与胆碱能性皮肤血管舒张。此外,据报道NO参与胆碱能性出汗;然而,COX是否参与胆碱能性出汗尚不清楚。对10名健康年轻(24±4岁)成年人(7名男性,3名女性)的四个皮肤部位进行了前臂出汗率(通气胶囊法)和皮肤血管传导率(CVC,激光多普勒血流仪单位/平均动脉压)评估,这些部位通过皮内微透析持续灌注1)乳酸林格液(对照)、2)10 mM酮咯酸(一种非选择性COX抑制剂)、3)10 mM N(G)-硝基-L-精氨酸甲酯(L-NAME,一种非选择性NO合酶抑制剂)或4)10 mM酮咯酸+10 mM L-NAME的组合。在这四个皮肤部位,以剂量依赖性方式同时输注乙酰甲胆碱(1、10、100、1000、2000 mM)。相对于对照部位,在整个实验过程中酮咯酸对前臂CVC没有影响(所有P>0.05),而L-NAME和酮咯酸+L-NAME在乙酰甲胆碱浓度达到10 mM及以上时降低了前臂CVC(所有P<0.05)。相反,治疗部位对前臂出汗没有主要影响(P=0.488),乙酰甲胆碱剂量与治疗部位之间也没有相互作用(P=0.711)。因此,在四个部位,从基线到乙酰甲胆碱最大剂量时的前臂出汗(mg·min(-1)·cm(-2))没有差异(在2000 mM时,对照为0.50±0.23,酮咯酸为0.44±0.23,L-NAME为0.51±0.22,酮咯酸+L-NAME为0.51±0.23)。我们表明,抑制NO合酶和COX均不影响1-2000 mM乙酰甲胆碱诱导的胆碱能性出汗。