Trinity Joel D, Broxterman Ryan M, Richardson Russell S
Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Center, George E. Whalen VA Medical Center, Salt Lake City, UT, USA; Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Geriatric, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.
Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Center, George E. Whalen VA Medical Center, Salt Lake City, UT, USA; Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Geriatric, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA.
Free Radic Biol Med. 2016 Sep;98:90-102. doi: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2016.01.017. Epub 2016 Feb 10.
During exercise, oxygen and nutrient rich blood must be delivered to the active skeletal muscle, heart, skin, and brain through the complex and highly regulated integration of central and peripheral hemodynamic factors. Indeed, even minor alterations in blood flow to these organs have profound consequences on exercise capacity by modifying the development of fatigue. Therefore, the fine-tuning of blood flow is critical for optimal physical performance. At the level of the peripheral circulation, blood flow is regulated by a balance between the mechanisms responsible for vasodilation and vasoconstriction. Once thought of as toxic by-products of in vivo chemistry, free radicals are now recognized as important signaling molecules that exert potent vasoactive responses that are dependent upon the underlying balance between oxidation-reduction reactions or redox balance. Under normal healthy conditions with low levels of oxidative stress, free radicals promote vasodilation, which is attenuated with exogenous antioxidant administration. Conversely, with advancing age and disease where background oxidative stress is elevated, an exercise-induced increase in free radicals can further shift the redox balance to a pro-oxidant state, impairing vasodilation and attenuating blood flow. Under these conditions, exogenous antioxidants improve vasodilatory capacity and augment blood flow by restoring an "optimal" redox balance. Interestingly, while the active skeletal muscle, heart, skin, and brain all have unique functions during exercise, the mechanisms by which free radicals contribute to the regulation of blood flow is remarkably preserved across each of these varied target organs.
在运动过程中,富含氧气和营养物质的血液必须通过中枢和外周血流动力学因素的复杂且高度调节的整合,输送到活跃的骨骼肌、心脏、皮肤和大脑。事实上,即使这些器官的血流量发生微小变化,也会通过改变疲劳的发展对运动能力产生深远影响。因此,血流量的微调对于最佳身体表现至关重要。在外周循环层面,血流量由负责血管舒张和血管收缩的机制之间的平衡来调节。自由基曾被认为是体内化学反应的有毒副产物,现在被认为是重要的信号分子,它们会产生强大的血管活性反应,这种反应取决于氧化还原反应或氧化还原平衡之间的潜在平衡。在正常健康且氧化应激水平较低的情况下,自由基促进血管舒张,而外源性抗氧化剂的使用会减弱这种作用。相反,随着年龄增长和疾病发展,背景氧化应激升高,运动诱导的自由基增加会进一步使氧化还原平衡转向促氧化状态,损害血管舒张并减少血流量。在这些情况下,外源性抗氧化剂通过恢复“最佳”氧化还原平衡来提高血管舒张能力并增加血流量。有趣的是,虽然活跃的骨骼肌、心脏、皮肤和大脑在运动过程中都有独特的功能,但自由基参与血流量调节的机制在这些不同的靶器官中都得到了显著保留。