Human Cardiovascular Physiology Laboratory, Department of Health and Exercise Science, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA.
Cardiovascular Research Center, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA.
J Physiol. 2018 Aug;596(15):3371-3389. doi: 10.1113/JP275913. Epub 2018 Apr 24.
Increasing blood flow (hyperaemia) to exercising muscle helps match oxygen delivery and metabolic demand. During exercise in hypoxia, there is a compensatory increase in muscle hyperaemia that maintains oxygen delivery and tissue oxygen consumption. Nitric oxide (NO) and prostaglandins (PGs) contribute to around half of the augmented hyperaemia during hypoxic exercise, although the contributors to the remaining response are unknown. In the present study, inhibiting NO, PGs, Na /K -ATPase and inwardly rectifying potassium (K ) channels did not blunt augmented hyperaemia during hypoxic exercise beyond previous observations with NO/PG block alone. Furthermore, although inhibition of only Na /K -ATPase and K channels abolished hyperaemia during hypoxia at rest, it had no effect on augmented hyperaemia during hypoxic exercise. This is the first study in humans to demonstrate that Na /K -ATPase and K channel activation is required for augmented muscle hyperaemia during hypoxia at rest but not during hypoxic exercise, thus providing new insight into vascular control.
Exercise hyperaemia in hypoxia is augmented relative to the same exercise intensity in normoxia. During moderate-intensity handgrip exercise, endothelium-derived nitric oxide (NO) and vasodilating prostaglandins (PGs) contribute to ∼50% of the augmented forearm blood flow (FBF) response to hypoxic exercise (HypEx), although the mechanism(s) underlying the remaining response are unclear. We hypothesized that combined inhibition of NO, PGs, Na /K -ATPase and inwardly rectifying potassium (K ) channels would abolish the augmented hyperaemic response in HypEx. In healthy young adults, FBF responses were measured (Doppler ultrasound) and forearm vascular conductance was calculated during 5 min of rhythmic handgrip exercise at 20% maximum voluntary contraction under regional sympathoadrenal inhibition in normoxia and isocapnic HypEx (O saturation ∼80%). Compared to control, combined inhibition of NO, PGs, Na /K -ATPase and K channels (l-NMMA + ketorolac + ouabain + BaCl Protocol 1; n = 10) blunted the compensatory increase in FBF during HypEx by ∼50% (29 ± 6 mL min vs. 62 ± 8 mL min , respectively, P < 0.05). By contrast, ouabain + BaCl alone (Protocol 2; n = 10) did not affect this augmented hyperaemic response (50 ± 11 mL min vs. 60 ± 13 mL min , respectively, P > 0.05). However, the blocked condition in both protocols abolished the hyperaemic response to hypoxia at rest (P < 0.05). We conclude that activation of Na /K -ATPase and K channels is involved in the hyperaemic response to hypoxia at rest, although it does not contribute to the augmented exercise hyperaemia during hypoxia in humans.
增加运动肌肉的血流量(充血)有助于匹配氧气输送和代谢需求。在低氧运动中,肌肉充血会代偿性增加,以维持氧气输送和组织氧消耗。一氧化氮(NO)和前列腺素(PGs)对低氧运动中增强的充血反应贡献约一半,尽管对剩余反应的贡献尚不清楚。在本研究中,抑制 NO、PGs、Na+/K+-ATP 酶和内向整流钾(K+)通道并没有使低氧运动中的增强充血反应超出单独使用 NO/PG 阻断时的观察结果。此外,尽管仅抑制 Na+/K+-ATP 酶和 K 通道会在低氧休息时消除充血反应,但对低氧运动中的增强充血反应没有影响。这是首次在人体中证明,Na+/K+-ATP 酶和 K 通道的激活对于低氧休息时的肌肉增强充血反应是必需的,但对于低氧运动时的增强充血反应则不是必需的,从而为血管控制提供了新的见解。
低氧运动时的充血反应相对于正常氧下相同运动强度时的充血反应增强。在中等强度的手握力运动中,内皮衍生的一氧化氮(NO)和血管扩张性前列腺素(PGs)对低氧运动(HypEx)时的前臂血流(FBF)增强反应贡献约 50%,尽管剩余反应的机制尚不清楚。我们假设联合抑制 NO、PGs、Na+/K+-ATP 酶和内向整流钾(K+)通道将消除 HypEx 中的增强充血反应。在健康的年轻成年人中,在区域交感神经抑制下,通过多普勒超声测量 5 分钟的节律性手握力运动时的 FBF 反应,并在正常氧和等碳酸低氧(O 饱和度约 80%)下计算前臂血管传导率。与对照相比,联合抑制 NO、PGs、Na+/K+-ATP 酶和 K 通道(l-NMMA+ketorolac+ouabain+BaCl 方案 1;n=10)使 HypEx 时的补偿性 FBF 增加减少了约 50%(分别为 29±6 mL min vs. 62±8 mL min ,P<0.05)。相比之下,ouabain+BaCl 单独(方案 2;n=10)对这种增强的充血反应没有影响(分别为 50±11 mL min vs. 60±13 mL min ,P>0.05)。然而,两个方案中的阻塞条件均消除了低氧休息时的充血反应(P<0.05)。我们得出结论,Na+/K+-ATP 酶和 K 通道的激活参与了低氧休息时的充血反应,但它不参与人类低氧运动时增强的运动充血反应。