Thomas Kate N, van Rij André M, Lucas Samuel J E, Cotter James D
Department of Surgical Sciences, Dunedin School of Medicine, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand;
School of Physical Education, Sport and Exercise Sciences, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2017 Mar 1;312(3):R281-R291. doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.00404.2016. Epub 2016 Dec 21.
Passive heat induces beneficial perfusion profiles, provides substantive cardiovascular strain, and reduces blood pressure, thereby holding potential for healthy and cardiovascular disease populations. The aim of this study was to assess acute responses to passive heat via lower-limb, hot-water immersion in patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD) and healthy, elderly controls. Eleven patients with PAD (age 71 ± 6 yr, 7 male, 4 female) and 10 controls (age 72 ± 7 yr, 8 male, 2 female) underwent hot-water immersion (30-min waist-level immersion in 42.1 ± 0.6°C water). Before, during, and following immersion, brachial and popliteal artery diameter, blood flow, and shear stress were assessed using duplex ultrasound. Lower-limb perfusion was measured also using venous occlusion plethysmography and near-infrared spectroscopy. During immersion, shear rate increased ( < 0.0001) comparably between groups in the popliteal artery (controls: +183 ± 26%; PAD: +258 ± 54%) and brachial artery (controls: +117 ± 24%; PAD: +107 ± 32%). Lower-limb blood flow increased significantly in both groups, as measured from duplex ultrasound (>200%), plethysmography (>100%), and spectroscopy, while central and peripheral pulse-wave velocity decreased in both groups. Mean arterial blood pressure was reduced by 22 ± 9 mmHg (main effect < 0.0001, interaction = 0.60) during immersion, and remained 7 ± 7 mmHg lower 3 h afterward. In PAD, popliteal shear profiles and claudication both compared favorably with those measured immediately following symptom-limited walking. A 30-min hot-water immersion is a practical means of delivering heat therapy to PAD patients and healthy, elderly individuals to induce appreciable systemic (chronotropic and blood pressure lowering) and hemodynamic (upper and lower-limb perfusion and shear rate increases) responses.
被动加热可诱导有益的灌注模式,产生实质性的心血管应激,并降低血压,因此对健康人群和心血管疾病患者具有潜在益处。本研究的目的是评估外周动脉疾病(PAD)患者和健康老年对照者通过下肢热水浸泡对被动加热的急性反应。11例PAD患者(年龄71±6岁,男性7例,女性4例)和10例对照者(年龄72±7岁,男性8例,女性2例)接受热水浸泡(在42.1±0.6°C的水中腰部水平浸泡30分钟)。在浸泡前、浸泡期间和浸泡后,使用双功超声评估肱动脉和腘动脉的直径、血流量和剪切应力。还使用静脉闭塞体积描记法和近红外光谱法测量下肢灌注。浸泡期间,腘动脉(对照组:+183±26%;PAD组:+258±54%)和肱动脉(对照组:+117±24%;PAD组:+107±32%)的剪切速率在两组之间呈相似增加(<0.0001)。根据双功超声(>200%)、体积描记法(>100%)和光谱法测量,两组下肢血流量均显著增加,而两组的中心和外周脉搏波速度均降低。浸泡期间平均动脉血压降低22±9 mmHg(主要效应<0.0001,交互作用=0.60),3小时后仍低7±7 mmHg。在PAD患者中,腘动脉剪切模式和跛行与症状限制行走后立即测量的结果相比均较好。30分钟的热水浸泡是一种向PAD患者和健康老年人提供热疗的实用方法,可诱导明显的全身(变时性和血压降低)和血流动力学(上肢和下肢灌注及剪切速率增加)反应。