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1.
Effect of alterations in muscle fiber length on diaphragm blood flow   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A variety of studies have examined the response of diaphragmatic blood flow (Qdi) to rhythmic pleiometric (i.e., shortening) and isometric contractions. The effect of changes in diaphragm fiber length on Qdi are, however, unknown. The present study examined the effect of changes in diaphragm fiber length on Qdi and the effect of alterations in length on the response of Qdi to increases in diaphragm contractile activity. Studies were performed on 21 anesthetized mechanically ventilated dogs in which a strip of costal diaphragm was developed in situ. The strip was immobilized in a rigid metal frame that permitted precise adjustment of muscle length. Strip blood flow was assessed with a drop counter attached to a catheter in the branch of the phrenic vein draining the strip. Strips were electrically stimulated via intramuscular electrodes, and the isometric tension developed was measured with a force transducer. Fiber length was expressed as a percentage of the length at which active isometric tension was maximum (Lo). With the diaphragm at rest, steady-state blood flow fell by 59 +/- 6% (SE) (P less than 0.001) as fiber length was increased from 92 to 107% Lo. Blood flow also varied as a function of length when muscles contracted rhythmically (15 contractions/min, duty cycle 50%) to generate isometric tensions equal to 20 and 80% of maximum. As fiber length increased from 92 to 106% Lo, Qdi fell by 36 +/- 6% (SE) when tension was 80% of maximum (P less than 0.01) and by 38 +/- 6% (SE) when tension was 20% of maximum (P less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that increasing muscle contraction frequency, which alters the duty cycle and metabolic rate, would increase the contribution of the contractile phase to mean venous blood flow in isolated skeletal muscle during rhythmic contractions. Canine gastrocnemius muscle (n = 5) was isolated, and 3-min stimulation periods of isometric, tetanic contractions were elicited sequentially at rates of 0.25, 0.33, and 0.5 contractions/s. The O2 uptake, tension-time integral, and mean venous blood flow increased significantly (P < 0.05) with each contraction frequency. Venous blood flow during both the contractile (106 +/- 6, 139 +/- 8, and 145 +/- 8 ml x 100 g-1 x min-1) and noncontractile phases (64 +/- 3, 78 +/- 4, and 91 +/- 5 ml x 100 g-1 x min-1) increased with contraction frequency. Although developed force and duration of the contractile phase were never significantly different for a single contraction during the three contraction frequencies, the amount of blood expelled from the muscle during an individual contraction increased significantly with contraction frequency (0.24 +/- 0.03, 0.32 +/- 0.02, and 0.36 +/- 0.03 ml x N-1 x min-1, respectively). This increased blood expulsion per contraction, coupled with the decreased time in the noncontractile phase as contraction frequency increased, resulted in the contractile phase contribution to mean venous blood flow becoming significantly greater (21 +/- 4, 30 +/- 4, and 38 +/- 6%) as contraction frequency increased. These results demonstrate that the percent contribution of the muscle contractile phase to mean venous blood flow becomes significantly greater as contraction frequency (and thereby duty cycle and metabolic rate) increases and that this is in part due to increased blood expulsion per contraction.  相似文献   

3.
The magnitude of the blood flow response to exercise has been linked to both the contractile work performed and the metabolic cost of the activity. Under certain conditions, contractile work and metabolic cost may be dissociated. This study examined the blood flow response to trains of contractions when contraction duration was manipulated under conditions of similar tension-time indexes (isometric analog of work). Previous investigations have shown that trains of short-duration contractions have a greater ATP utilization, which may result from an augmented ion transport required for muscle activation and relaxation. On the basis of these findings, we hypothesized that the blood flow response would be greater to a train of short-duration contractions than a train of long-duration contractions. Canine gastrocnemius-plantaris muscle (n = 8) was isolated, and blood flow assessed with an ultrasound flow probe placed around the popliteal artery. The sciatic nerve was stimulated to produce two contraction protocols that resulted in similar contraction-to-rest ratios: short duration: 0.25 s/0.75 s vs. long duration: 1 s /3 s. In accord with the design of the experiment, the tension-time indexes were identical for the two contraction protocols (short: 18.6 +/- 1.0 vs. long: 18.6 +/- 1.0 kN.s). Steady-state oxygen consumption was greater in the short-duration contractions (17.2 +/- 0.9 ml.100 g(-1).min(-1)) than in the long-duration contractions (11.7 +/- 0.7 ml.100 g(-1).min(-1)). Similarly, the steady-state blood flow was greater in contractions of short duration (125 +/- 7 ml/min) compared with long-duration contractions (92 +/- 7 ml/min). Contractions of short duration resulted in significantly higher oxygen consumptions and blood flows compared with contractions of long duration despite the same total contractile work. The blood flow response to muscle contraction appears to be more closely associated with muscle metabolism than contractile work performed.  相似文献   

4.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the influence of the size of the active muscle mass on the cardiovascular response to static contraction. Twelve male subjects performed one-arm handgrip (HG), two-leg extension (LE), and a "dead-lift" maneuver (DL) in a randomly assigned order for 3 min at 30% of maximal voluntary contraction. O2 uptake (VO2), heart rate (HR), and mean intra-arterial blood pressure (MABP) were measured at rest and, in addition to absolute tension exerted, throughout contraction. There was a direct relationship between the size of the active muscle mass and the magnitude of the increases in VO2, HR, and MABP, even though all contractions were performed at the same relative intensity. Tension, VO2, HR, and MABP increased progressively from HG to LE to DL. It was concluded that at the same percentage of maximal voluntary contraction, the magnitude of the cardiovascular response to isometric exercise is directly influenced by the size of the contracting muscle mass.  相似文献   

5.
We determined the relationship of diaphragmatic contraction rate to diaphragmatic blood flow (Qdi), metabolism, and contractility in nine open-chested mechanically ventilated newborn lambs. The diaphragm was paced for 15 min at slow (20/min) and fast (100/min) contraction rates each followed by a 30-min rest period. There was a mild reduction in transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi) during the slow contraction period accompanied by a shift to the right of the curve relating stimulation frequency (10-100 Hz) to Pdi. Pdi returned to control at the start of the fast contraction period, but then fell by 30% within 2 min with continued fast contraction rates. The frequency-Pdi curve was significantly shifted to the right. Qdi, O2 transport, and O2 consumption increased during slow contraction and to an even greater extent during fast contraction. Fractional O2 extraction reached an apparent maximum during slow contraction. Lactate efflux from the right phrenic vein during slow contraction remained unchanged from control. During fast contraction lactate efflux rose proportionately more than did O2 consumption. We conclude that the energy demands at fast rates of diaphragmatic contraction in newborn lambs cannot be met by aerobic metabolism alone despite increasing O2 transport to the diaphragm.  相似文献   

6.
The tension-time index (TTI) has been used to estimate mechanical load, energy utilization, blood flow, and susceptibility to fatigue in contracting muscle. The TTI can be defined, for a rhythmically contracting muscle, as the product of average force development divided by maximum tetanic force times duty cycle [contraction time / (contraction + relaxation time)]. In this study, the TTI concept was applied to isolated diaphragm via a method that allowed TTI to be clamped at a predetermined value. The hypothesis tested was that, at constant TTI, muscle energetics and the extent of fatigue would vary with stimulation frequency. Isolated diaphragm strips were stimulated at 25, 50, 75, or 100 Hz for 4 min, one per second. Duty cycle was continuously adjusted to maintain TTI at 0.07, which was near the highest TTI tolerated for 4 min, at 20-Hz stimulation. At the end of the fatigue run, muscles were either immediately frozen for determination ATP, creatine, and creatine phosphate concentrations (n = 6) or stimulated for evaluation of low- and high-frequency fatigue (n = 5). Results demonstrated no difference in the extent of fatigue or in the final ATP and creatine phosphate concentrations between groups. Large within-run increases in duty cycle were required at low stimulation frequencies, but only small increases were required at the highest frequencies. The results demonstrate that, at a constant TTI, similar fatigue properties predominate at all stimulation frequencies with no clear distinction between high- and low-frequency fatigue. The method of clamping TTI during fatigue may be useful for evaluating energetics and contractile function between treatment groups in isolated muscle when treatment influences baseline contractile characteristics.  相似文献   

7.
Nine healthy volunteers performed a series of single handgrip isometric contractions to test the hypothesis that the blood flow response to a contraction is determined solely by the tension-time index (isometric analog of work). Contractions were performed in duplicate at 15, 30, and 60% of maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) at durations of 0.5, 1, and 2 s. Forearm blood flow (FBF) was measured beat by beat by using Doppler ultrasound. Peak FBF responded in a graded fashion to graded increases in peak tension with contraction time held constant (35, 56, and 90 ml/min for 15, 30, and 60% MVC for 1 s, respectively). When tension was kept constant, peak FBF responded in a graded fashion to graded increases in duration (77, 90, and 97 ml/min for 60% MVC for 0.5, 1, and 2 s). With a constant tension-time index, peak FBF responded in a graded fashion to graded increases in peak tension (48, 56, and 77 ml/min for 15% MVC/2 s, 30% MVC/1 s, and 60% MVC/0.5 s). Similar trends were also observed for total postcontraction hyperemia. Blood flow increased regardless of whether the change in tension-time index was accomplished by an increase in tension or duration of contraction. However, with a constant tension-time index, the change in blood flow was related to the peak tension developed. Our results suggest that the blood flow response to a single muscle contraction is not determined solely by the work performed (tension-time index) but also by the number of muscle fibers recruited.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of shortening on contractile activity was studied in experiments in which shortening during the rising phase of an isotonic contraction was suddenly stopped. At the same muscle length and the same time after stimulation the rise in tension was much faster, if preceded by shortening, than during an isometric contraction, demonstrating an increase in contractile activity. In this experiment the rate of tension rise determined in various phases of contraction was proportional to the rate of isotonic shortening at the same time after stimulation. Therefore, the time course of the isotonic rising phase could be derived from the tension rise after shortening. The rate of isotonic shortening was found to be unrelated to the tension generated at various lengths and to correspond closely to the activation process induced by shortening. The length response explains differences between isotonic and isometric contractions with regard to energy release (Fenn effect) and time relations. These results extend previous work which showed that shortening during later phases of a twitch prolongs, while lengthening abbreviates contraction. Thus the length responses, which have been called shortening activation and lengthening deactivation, control activity throughout an isotonic twitch.  相似文献   

9.
We tested the hypothesis that static contraction causes greater reflex cardiovascular responses than dynamic contraction at equivalent workloads [i.e., same tension-time index (TTI), holding either contraction time or peak tension constant] in chloralose-anesthetized cats. When time was held constant and tension was allowed to vary, dynamic contraction of the hindlimb muscles evoked greater increases (means +/- SE) in mean arterial pressure (MAP; 50 +/- 7 vs. 30 +/- 5 mmHg), popliteal blood velocity (15 +/- 3 vs. 5 +/- 1 cm/s), popliteal venous PCO(2) (15 +/- 3 vs. 3 +/- 1 mmHg), and a greater decrease in popliteal venous pH (0.07 +/- 0.01 vs. 0.03 +/- 0.01), suggesting greater metabolic stimulation during dynamic contraction. Similarly, when peak tension was held constant and time was allowed to vary, dynamic contraction evoked a greater increase in blood velocity (13 +/- 1 vs. -1 +/- 1 cm/s) without causing any differences in other variables. To investigate the reflex contribution of mechanoreceptors, we stretched the hindlimb dynamically and statically at the same TTI. A larger reflex increase in MAP during dynamic stretch (32 +/- 8 vs. 24 +/- 6 mmHg) was observed when time was held constant, indicating greater mechanoreceptor stimulation. However, when peak tension was held constant, there were no differences in the reflex cardiovascular response to static and dynamic stretch. In conclusion, at comparable TTI, when peak tension is variable, dynamic muscle contraction causes larger cardiovascular responses than static contraction because of greater chemical and mechanical stimulation. However, when peak tensions are equivalent, static and dynamic contraction or stretch produce similar cardiovascular responses.  相似文献   

10.
The elevated intramuscular pressure (IMP) associated with sustained muscle contraction can affect blood flow, and could influence the long-term viability of functional skeletal muscle grafts. We therefore examined the relationship between force, peak IMP and blood flow in the tibialis anterior muscle of the anaesthetized rabbit. During isometric contractions, IMP was related linearly to force, and only the slope of the relationship varied between animals. During isotonic contractions, however, the highest values of IMP were found at the lowest force levels, and IMP appeared to be related to the amount and speed of shortening. During repeated isometric contractions, the ratio of IMP to force varied with time, stimulation pattern and subject. Mean blood flow did not differ appreciably between␣repetitive isometric contractions at duty cycles of 10–40%, and was unrelated to integrated pressure, integrated force, or depth from the surface. We conclude: (1) that IMP is unlikely to affect mean blood flow during cyclic activity that has a duty cycle less than 40%; and (2) that the clinical use of IMP as a predictor of muscle force appears to be justified only for single isometric contractions, and needs to be interpreted cautiously when contractions involve shortening or fatigue. Accepted: 17 November 1997  相似文献   

11.
We tested the hypothesis that vasoregulatory mechanisms exist in humans that can rapidly adjust muscle blood flow to repeated increases and decreases in exercise intensity. Six men and seven women (age, 24.4+/-1.3 yr) performed continuous dynamic forearm handgrip contractions (1- to 2-s contraction-to-relaxation duty cycle) during repeated step increases and decreases in contraction intensity. Three step change oscillation protocols were examined: Slow (7 contractions per contraction intensityx10 steps); Fast (2 contractions per contraction intensityx15 steps); and Very Fast (1 contraction per contraction intensityx15 steps). Forearm blood flow (FBF; Doppler and echo ultrasonography), heart rate (ECG), and mean arterial pressure (arterial tonometry) were examined for the equivalent of a cardiac cycle during each relaxation phase (FBFrelax). Mean arterial pressure and heart rate did not change during repeated step changes (P=0.352 and P=0.190). For both Slow and Fast conditions, relaxation phase FBFrelax adjusted immediately and repeatedly to both increases and decreases in contraction intensity, and the magnitude and time course of FBFrelax changes were virtually identical. For the Very Fast condition, FBFrelax increased with the first contraction and thereafter slowly increased over the course of repeated contraction intensity oscillations. We conclude that vasoregulatory mechanisms exist in human skeletal muscle that are capable of rapidly and repeatedly adjusting muscle blood flow with ongoing step changes in contraction intensity. Importantly, they demonstrate symmetry in response magnitude and time course with increasing versus decreasing contraction intensity but cannot adjust to very fast exercise intensity oscillations.  相似文献   

12.
This work compares the specific effects of 3 mo of moderate, isometric, or dynamic voluntary exercises on the contractile properties of human adductor pollicis muscle. Isometric training consisted of 10 daily contractions of 5-s duration at the frequency of one contraction per minute. Dynamic training consisted of 10 daily series of 10 fast contractions (less than 0.5-s duration) moving a load of one-third of the maximal muscle strength at a frequency of one series per minute. Both training programs produced a concomitant increase in maximal tetanic tension and in peak rate of tension development (Ro). A larger increase (P less than 0.05) was found after isometric training (20 vs. 11% after dynamic exercises), whereas Ro augmented more (P less than 0.05) after dynamic contractions (31 vs. 18% after isometric training). Enhancements of twitch force (Pt), rates of twitch tension development (Rt), and of relaxation (St) were, respectively, 20, 20, and 12% after isometric training. There was no modification of contraction time and time of half relaxation (T 1/2R). Conversely, dynamic training produced increases of Rt (25%) and St (16%), associated with an apparently paradoxical decrease of Pt (10%) and reductions of contraction time (11%) and T 1/2R (9%). Maximal shortening velocity was only increased after dynamic training (21%), whereas the maximal muscle power presented a large increase (P less than 0.05) after isometric exercises (51 vs. 19% after dynamic exercises) and a shift of its optimal peak toward heavier loads. This study suggests that human muscle adapts differently to isometric or to dynamic training programs and provides evidence that its contractile kinetics can be altered by exercises performed in physiological conditions.  相似文献   

13.
Energy Production in Cardiac Isotonic Contractions   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The energy output of rabbit papillary muscle is examined and it is shown that there is more energy liberated in an afterloaded isotonic contraction than in an "equivalent" isometric contraction. This statement holds true regardless of whether equivalence is based on the proposition that tension or the time integral of tension is the best index of muscle energy expenditure. Besides the external work performed there is additional heat production in isotonic contractions and this heat increases as the afterload is decreased. The additional heat is more evident when tension rather than the time integral of tension is made the determinant of energy expenditure. It is shown in single contractions that the rate of isotonic heat production, regardless of afterload size, never exceeds the heat rate recorded in an isometric contraction at the same initial length. Experiments reveal no simple linear correlation between isotonic energy output and contractile element work. Problems associated with the compartmentalization of the energy output of a contraction are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Antibodies to paramyosin (APM) induce a partial decrease of the isometric tension in glycerinated fibres of the Anodonta cygnea catch muscle in the presence of ATP and Ca2+; the myofibrillar Mg2+ ATPase increases concomitantly. Assumedly paramyosin inhibits the cross-bridges unlocking, retaining them mechanically in a locked state. The fibres of barnacle giant muscle in an ATP deficient solution respond to APM by transient isometric tension development. A model for the participation of paramyosin in the contractile process is proposed. In both muscle types paramyosin hinders the functioning of certain elements of the contractile machinery.  相似文献   

15.
Previous studies show that transient increases in both blood flow and magnetic resonance image signal intensity (SI) occur in human muscle after brief, single contractions, and that the SI increases are threefold larger in physically active compared with sedentary subjects. This study examined the relationship between these transient changes by measuring anterior tibial artery flow (Doppler ultrasound), anterior muscle SI (3T, one-shot echo-planar images, TR/TE = 1,000/35), and muscle blood volume and hemoglobin saturation [near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS)] in the same subjects after 1-s-duration maximum isometric ankle dorsiflexion contractions. Arterial flow increased to a peak 5.9 ± 0.7-fold above rest (SE, n = 11, range 2.6-10.2) within 7 s and muscle SI increased to a peak 2.7 ± 0.6% (range 0.0-6.0%) above rest within 12 s after the contractions. The peak postcontractile SI change was significantly correlated with both peak postcontractile flow (r = 0.61, n = 11) and with subject activity level (r = 0.63, n = 10) estimated from 7-day accelerometer recordings. In a subset of 7 subjects in which NIRS data acquisition was successful, the peak magnitude of the postcontractile SI change agreed well with SI calculated from the NIRS blood volume and saturation changes (r = 0.80, slope = 1.02, intercept = 0.16), confirming the blood-oxygenation-level-dependent (BOLD) mechanism underlying the SI change. The magnitudes of postcontractile changes in blood saturation and SI were reproduced by a simple one-compartment muscle vascular model that incorporated the observed pattern of postcontractile flow, and which assumed muscle O(2) consumption peaks within 2 s after a brief contraction. The results show that muscle postcontractile BOLD SI changes depend critically on the balance between O(2) delivery and O(2) consumption, both of which can be altered by chronic physical activity.  相似文献   

16.
Effects of contraction frequency and duty cycle on diaphragmatic blood flow   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The effects of diaphragmatic contraction frequency (no. of intermittent tetanic contractions/min) at a given tension-time index and of duty cycle (contraction time/total cycle time) on diaphragmatic blood flow were measured in anesthetized mongrel dogs during bilateral supramaximal phrenic nerve stimulation. Diaphragmatic blood flow was measured by the radionuclide-labeled microsphere method. Contraction frequency was varied between 10 and 160/min at duty cycles of 0.25 and 0.75. Diaphragmatic blood flow increased with contraction frequency from 1.47 +/- 0.13 ml X min-1 X g-1 (mean +/- SE) at an average of 18/min to 2.65 +/- 0.16 ml X min-1 X g-1 at 74/min (P less than 0.01) with a duty cycle of 0.25 and from 1.32 +/- 0.19 ml X min-1 X g-1 at an average of 15/min to 1.96 +/- 0.15 ml X min-1 X g-1 at 80/min (P less than 0.02) with a duty cycle of 0.75. At higher contraction frequencies diaphragmatic blood flow did not increase further at both duty cycles. In addition, diaphragmatic blood flow was higher with a duty cycle of 0.25 than 0.75 at all contraction frequencies. We conclude that frequency of contraction is a major determinant of diaphragmatic blood flow and that high duty cycle impedes diaphragmatic blood flow.  相似文献   

17.
Previous studies suggest that the blood pressure response to static contraction is greater than that caused by dynamic exercise. In anesthetized cats, however, pressor responses to electrically induced static and dynamic contraction of the same muscle group are similar during equivalent workloads and peak tension development [i.e., similar tension-time index (TTI)]. To determine if the same relationship exists in humans, where contraction is voluntary and central command is present, dynamic (180 s; 1/s) and static (90 s) contractions at 30% of maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) were performed. Dynamic contraction also was repeated at the same TTI for 90 s at 60% MVC. Mean arterial pressure (MAP), heart rate (HR), cardiac output (CO), MAP during postexercise arterial occlusion (an index of the metaboreceptor-induced activation of the exercise pressor reflex), and relative perceived exertion (RPE) (an index of central command) were assessed. No differences in these variables were found between static and dynamic contraction at a tension of 30% MVC. During dynamic contraction at 60% MVC, changes in MAP (16 +/- 3 vs. 19 +/- 4 mmHg) and absolute HR (92 +/- 6 vs. 69 +/- 5 beats/min), CO (7.9 +/- 0.4 vs. 6.3 +/- 0.3 l/min), RPE (16 +/- 1 vs. 13 +/- 1), and MAP during postexercise arterial occlusion (115 +/- 3 vs. 100 +/- 4 mmHg) were greater than during static contraction (P < 0.05). Thus increases in MAP and HR, activation of central command, and muscle metabolite-induced stimulation of the exercise pressor reflex during static and dynamic contraction in humans seem to be similar when peak tension and TTI are equal. Augmented responses to dynamic contraction at 60% MVC are likely related to greater activation of these two mechanisms.  相似文献   

18.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the contractile response of skeletal muscle in situ when stimulation results in an unfused tetanic contraction. The left gastrocnemius-plantaris muscle group of anesthetized (pentobarbital sodium) dogs (n = 16) was connected to an isometric lever and stimulated indirectly for 30 min. During 10-Hz stimulation, total tension (the peak of each oscillation in tension) increased during the first 2 min of stimulation (staircase), then decreased during the remaining 28 min of stimulation. Since relaxation was incomplete at this rate of stimulation, the developed tension, the difference between peak tension and the lowest tension between successive contractions, did not follow the same pattern of staircase and fatigue as the peak tension did. Developed tension (delta T) decreased during the staircase response then increased from 2 to 10 min before finally decreasing again during the last 20 min, ending at 56 +/- 15 (mean +/- SE) % of the initial (first contraction) delta T. At 2 min of 10-Hz contractions, half-relaxation time (1/2 RT) was too long to measure (insufficient relaxation between contractions), but later, 1/2 RT decreased from greater than 65 ms to less than 40 ms. Increased 1/2 RT has been associated with reduced energy availability. If an increased 1/2 RT is an indication of insufficient energy, then it can be concluded that fatigue continued in spite of a recovery of energy supplies. This suggests a possible dissociation of fatigue and energy availability.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of endothelin (ET) on transmembrane potential and isometric force were studied in ferret bronchial and tracheal smooth muscles. At rest, the muscle cells were electrically and mechanically quiescent. The mean resting potential for the bronchial cells was -70 +/- 1 mV (n = 25 cells/8 ferrets), and that of the tracheal cells was -60 +/- 1 mV (n = 7 cells/2 ferrets). ET depolarized and contracted both types of muscle cells in a concentration-dependent manner. At 1 nM ET, the bronchial muscle cells were significantly depolarized with concomitant force generation. In contrast, greater than 30 nM ET was required for the tracheal muscle cells to respond. The bronchial cells were further depolarized by 10 and 100 nM ET with electrical slow-wave activity present. The calcium channel antagonist verapamil substantially inhibited the contractions produced by 100 nM ET and abolished the slow-wave activity without affecting the base-line depolarization. Pretreatment of the bronchial muscle with 30 microM indomethacin did not affect the ET-induced contraction. These results suggest that ET modulates airway smooth muscle tone by direct activation and/or depolarization-induced activation of sarcolemmal calcium channels.  相似文献   

20.
We investigated the selective effects of changes in transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi) and duty cycle on diaphragmatic blood flow in supine dogs at normal arterial pressure (N), moderate hypotension (MH), and severe hypotension (SH) [mean arterial pressure (Part) of 116, 75, and 50 mmHg, respectively]. The diaphragm was paced at a rate of 12/min by bilateral phrenic nerve stimulation. Left phrenic (Qphr-T) and left internal mammary (Qim-T) arterial flows were measured by electromagnetic flow probes. Changes in Pdi and duty cycle were achieved by changing the stimulation frequencies and the duration of contraction, whereas Part changes were produced by bleeding. With N and at a duty cycle of 0.5, incremental increases in Pdi produced peaks in Qphr-T and Qim-T at 30% maximum diaphragmatic pressure (Pdimax) with a gradual decline at higher Pdi. With MH and SH, blood flow peaked at 10% Pdimax. At any given Pdi, blood flow was lower with MH and SH in comparison to N. The effect of duty cycle was tested at two levels of Pdi. With N and at low Pdi (25% Pdimax), blood flow rose progressively with increases in duty cycle, whereas at moderate Pdi level (50% Pdimax) blood flow peaked at a duty cycle of 0.3, with no increase thereafter. With MH, blood flow at low Pdi rose linearly with increasing duty cycle but to a lesser extent than with N, and at a moderate Pdi flow peaked at a duty cycle of 0.3. With SH, blood flow at low and moderate Pdi was limited at duty cycles greater than 0.3 and 0.1, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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