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1.
During motionless standing an increased hydrostatic pressure leads to increased transcapillary fluid filtration into the interstitial space of the tissues of the lower extremities. The resulting changes in calf volume were measured using a mercury-in-silastic strain gauge. Following a change in body posture from lying to standing or sitting a two-stage change in calf volume was observed. A fast initial filling of the capacitance vessels was followed by a slow but continuous increase in calf volume during motionless standing and sitting with the legs dependent passively. The mean rates of this slow increase were about 0.17%.min-1 during standing and 0.12%.min-1 during sitting, respectively. During cycle ergometer exercise the plethysmographic recordings were highly influenced by movement artifacts. These artifacts, however, were removed from the recordings by low-pass filtering. As a result the slow volume changes, i.e. changes of the extravascular fluid were selected from the recorded signal. Contrary to the increases during standing and sitting the calf volumes of all 30 subjects decreased during cycle ergometer exercise. The mean decrease during 18 min of cycling (2-20 min) was -1.6% at 50 W work load and -1.9% at 100 W, respectively. This difference was statistically significant (p less than or equal to 0.01). The factors which may counteract the development of an interstitial edema, even during quiet standing and sitting, are discussed in detail. During cycling, however, three factors are most likely to contribute to the observed reduction in calf volume: (1) The decrease in venous pressure, which in turn reduces the effective filtration pressure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
To study the transcapillary fluid movements in the human lower limb in the upright body position and during muscle exercise, the slow changes in thigh and calf volumes were measured by mercury-in-rubber-strain gauge plethysmography. Measurements were carried out on 20 healthy volunteers while sitting, standing and doing cycle ergometer exercise at intensities of 50 and 100-W. A plethysmographic recording of slow extravascular volume changes during muscle exercise was possible because movement artefacts were eliminated by low-pass filtering. While standing and sitting the volumes of both thigh and calf increased due to enhanced transcapillary filtration. While standing the mean rate of increase was 0.13%.min-1 in the calf and 0.09%.min-1 in the thigh. During cycle ergometer exercise at 50 and 100 W, the calf volume decreased with a mean rate of -0.09.min-1. In contrast, the thigh volume did not change significantly during exercise at 50 W and increased at 100 W. Most of the increase occurred during the first half of the experimental period i.e. between min 2 and 12, amounting to +0.6%. Thus, simultaneous measurements revealed opposite changes in the thigh and calf. This demonstrates that the conflicting findings reported in the literature may have occurred because opposite changes can occur in different muscle groups of the working limb at the same time. Lowered venous pressure, increased lymph flow and increased tissue pressure in the contracting muscle are considered to have caused the reduction in calf volume during exercise.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
Eight young men (group A) underwent 5 h of quiet sitting, preceded by 30 min of recumbency, 20 min of standing, and 20 s of walking, and five other young men (group B) underwent 70 min of sitting, preceded by recumbency only, to determine the effects of prolonged sitting and previous posture on hemodynamic responses (measured by impedance plethysmography). Group A showed more calf blood pooling and a decrease in thigh blood flow during sitting in comparison with the control group, but after 1 h of sitting hemodynamic responses of the two groups were similar. Sitting for 5 h (1st vs. 5th h) resulted in an increase in calf venous pooling (17%) and a decrease in calf BF (13%), a reduction in gravitational pooling in the thigh (corresponding to increased pooling in the calf), increases in diastolic and mean arterial pressures (6 and 7.3 mmHg, respectively), and minor changes in heart rate, stroke volume, and cardiac output. The results show that it is necessary to sit for 1 h before hemodynamic responses can be assessed in this position, regardless of the posture maintained previously. The main effect of prolonged sitting is pooling in the calf, which is compensated for by an increase in peripheral resistance.  相似文献   

4.
We analysed venous flow transients using a long venous circuit and right heart bypass in 17 dogs after a rapid decrease in atrial pressure. A biphase curve was obtained which we decomposed into a two-compartment model, one with a fast time constant for venous return (0.069 min) and 52% of total circulating flow (Q), and one with a slower time constant (0.456 min) and 48% of Q. Subsequently, separate drainage from splanchnic and peripheral beds (with the renal venous return in the peripheral bed drainage) allowed comparison of time constants and venous outflow in these beds. The sum of the venous outflow volumes over time during separate drainage was indistinguishable from the single biphasic venous outflow volume curve over time observed with a long circuit and single reservoir. The fast time constant of the biphasic curve was not different from that determined by separate drainage from the peripheral circulation. The slow time constant of the single biphasic curve of 0.456 min was hybrid of two time constants, 0.216 min in the splanchnic bed and 0.862 min in the peripheral bed. Separate drainage from peripheral and splanchnic vascular beds demonstrated that the peripheral bed constituted 70% of venous outflow in the fast time constant compartment using Caldini's technique, whereas the splanchnic bed constituted 63% of venous outflow in the slow time constant compartment. It is concluded that, although Caldini's technique demonstrates biphasic venous flow transients, neither the fast nor the slow time constant compartments resolved from this analysis represent a particular anatomical region or vascular bed.  相似文献   

5.
The purpose of this paper was to study spinal inhibition during several different motor tasks in healthy human subjects. The short-latency, reciprocal inhibitory pathways from the common peroneal (CP) nerve to the soleus muscle and from the tibial nerve to the tibialis anterior muscle were studied as a depression of ongoing voluntary electromyograph (EMG) activity. First, the effect of stimulus intensity on the amount of inhibition was examined to decide an appropriate stimulation to study the task-dependent modulation of inhibition. Then, the inhibition at one level of stimulation (1.5 x motor threshold) was investigated during standing, walking, and running. The change in slope of inhibition vs. EMG level, which approximates the fraction of ongoing activity that is inhibited, decreased with CP stimulation from 0.52 during standing to 0.30 during fast walking (6 km/h) to 0.17 during running at 9 km/h. Similarly, the slope decreased with tibial nerve stimulation from 0.68 (standing) to 0.42 (fast walking) to 0.35 (running at 9 km/h). All differences, except the last one, were highly significant (P < 0.01, Student's t-test). However, the difference between walking (0.42) and running (0.36) at the same speed (6 km/h) was not significant with tibial nerve stimulation and only significant at P < 0.05 with CP nerve stimulation (0.30, 0.20). Also, the difference between standing (0.52) and slow walking (3 km/h; 0.41) with CP stimulation was not significant, but it was significant (P < 0.01) with tibial nerve stimulation (0.68, 0.49). In conclusion, our findings indicate that spinal reciprocal inhibition decreases substantially with increasing speed and only changes to a lesser extent with task.  相似文献   

6.
[Purpose]The present study compared energy metabolism between walking and running at equivalent speeds during two incremental exercise tests.[Methods]Thirty four university students (18 males, 16 females) were recruited. Each participant completed two trials, consisting of walking (Walk) and running (Run) trials on different days, with 2-3 days apart. Exercise on a treadmill was started from initial stage of 3 min (3.0 k/m in Walk trial, 5.0 km/h in Run trial), and the speed for walking and running was progressively every minute by 0.5 km/h. The changes in metabolic variables, heart rate (HR), and rating of perceived exertion (RPE) during exercise were compared between the trials.[Results]Energy expenditure (EE) increased with speed in each trial. However, the Walk trial had a significantly higher EE than the Run trial at speeds exceeding 92 ± 2 % of the maximal walking speed (MWS, p < 0.01). Similarly, carbohydrate (CHO) oxidation was significantly higher in the Walk trial than in the Run trial at above 92 ± 2 %MWS in males (p < 0.001) and above 93 ± 1 %MWS in females (p < 0.05).[Conclusion]These findings suggest that EE and CHO oxidation during walking increase non-linearly with speed, and walking at a fast speed causes greater metabolic responses than running at the equivalent speed in young participants.  相似文献   

7.
Spatially resolved near-infrared oximeters quantify non-invasively muscle haemoglobin oxygen saturation (TOI) and, indirectly, local venous oxygen saturation (SvO(2)) and blood flow (MBF). TOI, SvO(2) and MBF of vastus lateralis and medial gastrocnemius were investigated after 5-min walking (3.2 km/h) and running (9.6 km/h) (n=7). The values of TOI were unchanged in the vastus lateralis during walking, whilst decreased during running in both muscles. For both muscles, TOI and SvO(2) values after walking were significantly greater than those found after running (P=0.043). The TOI went back (in 2 min) to its baseline value after walking in both muscles, whilst more slowly (in 4 min) after running in vastus lateralis. After running TOI of medial gastrocnemius had a tendency to be higher than the baseline value (reactive hyperaemia), concomitantly to the high MBF (twice the control value). The diverse oxygen demand in the stress tests and the consequent different pattern of TOI recovery reflect the different engagement of the two muscles. In conclusion, these results demonstrated the utility of TOI, independent of MBF and SvO(2), to be measured upon specific stress testing for differentiating the severity of peripheral vascular diseases and for assessing the collateral blood flow.  相似文献   

8.
A new method for measuring and characterizing free-living human locomotion is presented. A portable device was developed to objectively record and measure foot-ground contact information in every step for up to 24h. An artificial neural network (ANN) was developed to identify the type and intensity of locomotion. Forty subjects participated in the study. The subjects performed level walking, running, ascending and descending stairs at slow, normal and fast speeds determined by each subject, respectively. The device correctly identified walking, running, ascending and descending stairs (accuracy 98.78%, 98.33%, 97.33%, and 97.29% respectively) among different types of activities. It was also able to determine the speed of walking and running. The correlation between actual speed and estimated speed is 0.98, p< 0.0001. The average error of walking and running speed estimation is -0.050+/-0.747 km/h (mean +/- standard deviation). The study has shown the measurement of duration, frequency, type, and intensity of locomotion highly accurate using the new device and an ANN. It provides an alternative tool to the use of a gait lab to quantitatively study locomotion with high accuracy via a small, light and portable device, and to do so under free-living conditions for the clinical applications.  相似文献   

9.
Chronic orthostatic intolerance is often related to the postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS). POTS is characterized by upright tachycardia. Understanding of its pathophysiology remains incomplete, but edema and acrocyanosis of the lower extremities occur frequently. To determine how arterial and venous vascular properties account for these findings, we compared 13 patients aged 13-18 yr with 10 normal controls. Heart rate and blood pressure were continuously recorded, and strain-gauge plethysmography was used to measure forearm and calf blood flow, venous compliance, and microvascular filtration while the subject was supine and to measure calf blood flow and calf size change during head-up tilt. Resting venous pressure was higher in POTS compared with control (16 vs. 10 mmHg), which gave the appearance of decreased compliance in these patients. The threshold for edema formation decreased in POTS patients compared with controls (8.3 vs. 16.3 mmHg). With tilt, early calf blood flow increased in POTS patients (from 3.4 +/- 0.9 to 12.6 +/- 2.3 ml. 100 ml(-1). min(-1)) but did not increase in controls. Calf volume increased twice as much in POTS patients compared with controls over a shorter time of orthostasis. The data suggest that resting venous pressure is higher and the threshold for edema is lower in POTS patients compared with controls. Such findings make the POTS patients particularly vulnerable for edema fluid collection. This may signify a redistribution of blood to the lower extremities even while supine, accounting for tachycardia through vagal withdrawal.  相似文献   

10.
Limb venous compliance decreases with advancing age, even in healthy humans. To test the hypothesis that adrenergic mechanisms contribute to age-associated reductions in limb venous compliance, we measured calf venous compliance before and during acute systemic α- and β-adrenergic blockade in eight young (27 ± 1 yr old, mean ± SE) and eight older healthy men (67 ± 2 yr old). Calf venous compliance was determined in supine subjects by inflating a thigh-collecting cuff to 60 mmHg for 8 min and then decreasing it (1 mmHg/s) to 0 mmHg while calf volume was indexed with a strain gauge. The slope (·10?3) of the pressure-compliance relation (compliance= β? + 2·β?·cuff pressure), which is the first derivative of the quadratic pressure-volume relation [(Δlimb volume) = β?+ β?·(cuff pressure) + β?·(cuff pressure)2] during reductions in cuff pressure, was used to quantify calf venous compliance. Calf venous compliance was ~30% lower (P < 0.01) in older compared with young men before adrenergic blockade. In response to adrenergic blockade calf venous compliance did not increase in young (-2.62 ± 0.14 and -2.29 ± 0.18 ml·dl?1·mmHg?1, before and during blockade, respectively) or older men (-1.78 ± 0.27 and -1.68 ± 0.21 ml·dl?1 ·mmHg?1). Moreover, during adrenergic blockade differences in calf venous compliance between young and older men observed before adrenergic blockade persisted. Collectively, these data strongly suggest that adrenergic mechanisms neither directly restrain calf venous compliance in young or older men nor do they contribute to age-associated reductions in calf venous compliance in healthy men.  相似文献   

11.
Leg venous compliance is a determinant of peripheral venous pooling during orthostatic stress such that high venous compliance could contribute to reduced orthostatic tolerance. We tested the hypotheses that 1) calf venous compliance is reduced during baroreceptor unloading, and 2) calf venous compliance is greater in women than men. Twelve men (27 +/- 2 yr) and 12 women (25 +/- 2 yr) were studied in the supine posture. Calf venous compliance was determined by inflating a thigh venous collecting cuff to 60 mmHg for 8 min and then decreasing cuff pressure at a rate of 1 mmHg/s to 0 mmHg. The slope of the pressure-compliance relation (compliance = beta(1) + 2.beta(2).cuff pressure), which is the first derivative of the quadratic pressure-volume relation [(Deltalimb volume) = beta(0) + beta(1).(cuff pressure) + beta(2).(cuff pressure)(2)] during the reduction in collecting cuff pressure, was used to assess venous compliance at baseline and during one-legged lower body negative pressure (LBNP; -50 mmHg). At baseline, calf venous compliance was 48% lower (P < 0.001) in women than men and decreased in men (Delta-25 +/- 8%; P < 0.05) but not women (Delta1 +/- 11%) during LBNP. Rhythmic ischemic handgrip (Delta6 +/- 9%) and cold pressor testing (Delta-9 +/- 7%) did not alter calf venous compliance in a subgroup of men (n = 6). These data indicate gender-dependent effects on calf venous compliance under conditions associated with low sympathetic outflow (i.e., rest) and high sympathetic outflow (i.e., LBNP). However, they cannot explain gender-associated differences in orthostatic tolerance.  相似文献   

12.
The dynamics of mean values and blood pressure (BP) variability were studied under within-visit conditions in normotensive subjects. The study involved 104 volunteers aged 20 to 65 years (46 men and 58 women) without the history of hypertension. Nine repeated BP measurements were performed within 35 min in a summer period to determine the final time for the BP decrease, i.e., for the “stabilization” of BP within one visit, and the within-visit BP variability (WVV) expressed as the standard deviation (SD) and the coefficient of variation (CV). The tenth measurement of BP was conducted to assess the effect of physical activity after a 5-min walk followed by a 5-min seated position. In order to study the effect of seasons on the BP variation, 32 volunteers were examined in winter (January–February) and in summer (June–July) of the same year. The within-visit BP in normotensive subjects was characterized by two aspects. The first one associated with a decrease in systolic BP (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP), on average, by 7 mmHg and up to 2 mmHg, respectively, ended by the 25th minute and was followed by the period of conventional stabilization in mean values. The following two periods were observed in the SBP decrease: a 5-min rapid decrease (1 mmHg/min) and a 20-min slow decrease (0.1 mmHg/min). The dynamics of mean SBP values depended on gender and age. The second aspect is the individual SBP variability, which continued against the stabilization of mean values. The CV of 35-min SBP reached, on average, 4% and was higher in women compared with men. SD was higher in the older age group. The maximum variability was observed within the first 5 min under the investigation. Then, in the periods of slow decrease and stabilization, the variability did not change significantly (not exceeding 3%, on average), despite a significant decrease in the mean SBP values. During a rapid SBP decrease neither of variability indices depended on gender or age. The SD of SBP during the slow decrease and stabilization was higher in the older female group than in the young women, not differing in men of both age categories. After 5 min of rest in a seated position, the consequences of walking for BP were insignificant in normotensive subjects. The dynamics of SBP did not differ in summer and winter of the same year.  相似文献   

13.
Elevated calf compliance may contribute to orthostatic intolerance following space flight and bed rest. Calf venous compliance is measured conventionally with venous occulusion plethysmography in supine subjects. With this well-established technique, subjects undergo inflation of a pressure cuff around the thigh just above the knee, which increases calf venous pressure. A plethysmograph simultaneously measures calf volume elevation. Compliance equals calf volume elevation per mm Hg thigh occlusion (calf venous) pressure in relaxed legs of the supine subjects. Compliance may also be measured during stepwise head-up tilt (HUT) as calf volume elevation per mm Hg gravitational venous pressure elevation produced by HUT. However, during HUT on a tilt table with a footplate, calf muscles activate to counteract gravity: this is an obvious and natural response to gravitational force. Such muscle activation conceivably could reduce calf compliance, yet relatively little calf muscle activation occurs during HUT and orthostasis (<10% of maximal voluntary levels). Also, this activation produces minimal calf volume change (<0.3%). Therefore, we hypothesized that calf compliance measured with HUT equals that measured with supine venous occlusion.  相似文献   

14.
Hypertension (mean arterial pressure, (MAP) 131 +/- 3 mmHg) developed in 18 dogs 4 weeks after left nephrectomy, deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA), 5 mg/kg sc twice weekly), and 0.5% NaCl drinking solution. This can be compared with MAP (95 +/- 7 mmHg) of 13 dogs with nephrectomy alone and MAP (86 +/- 4 mmHg) of dogs without nephrectomy. The two-compartment model of the circulation revealed no differences in systemic vascular compliance, compartmental compliance, or flow distribution to the compartments. However, the time constant for venous return for the compartment with the rapid time constant was increased from 0.05 +/- 0.004 min in control animals to 0.07 +/- 0.006 min in the nephrectomy alone group and 0.09 +/- 0.008 min in the hypertensive group (p less than 0.001), as a result of an increase in venous resistance. Arteriolar resistance in this compartment was also increased in the hypertensive animals, as was the mean circulatory filling pressure and overall resistance to venous return. Nifedipine (0.025-0.05 mg/kg) reduced MAP by 15% in the nephrectomy alone group and by 22% in the hypertensive group, with reduction in arteriolar resistance only in the fast time constant compartment. In the slow time constant compartment, arteriolar resistance was increased by more than 100% and flow decreased by more than 50% after nifedipine. Unilateral nephrectomy, DOCA, plus NaCl resulted in hypertension by increasing arteriolar resistance in a vascular compartment with a fast time constant for venous return. Nifedipine countered this effect by inducing arteriolar vasodilation in this compartment. In addition, nifedipine reduced the mean circulatory filling pressure and overall resistance to venous return.  相似文献   

15.
The aim of the present study was to analyse the usefulness of the 6-20 rating of perceived exertion (RPE) scale for prescribing and self-regulating high-intensity interval training (HIT) in young individuals. Eight healthy young subjects (age = 27.5±6.7 years) performed maximal graded exercise testing to determine their maximal and reserve heart rate (HR). Subjects then performed two HIT sessions (20 min on a treadmill) prescribed and regulated by their HR (HR: 1 min at 50% alternated with 1 min at 85% of reserve HR) or RPE (RPE: 1 minute at the 9-11 level [very light-fairly light] alternated with 1 minute at the 15-17 level [hard-very hard]) in random order. HR response and walking/running speed during the 20 min of exercise were compared between sessions. No significant difference between sessions was observed in HR during low- (HR: 135±15 bpm; RPE: 138±20 bpm) and high-intensity intervals (HR: 168±15 bpm; RPE: 170±18 bpm). Walking/running speed during low- (HR: 5.7±1.2 km · h−1; RPE: 5.7±1.3 km · h−1) and high-intensity intervals (HR: 7.8±1.9 km · h−1; RPE: 8.2±1.7 km · h−1) was also not different between sessions. No significant differences were observed in HR response and walking/running speed between HIT sessions prescribed and regulated by HR or RPE. This finding suggests that the 6-20 RPE scale may be a useful tool for prescribing and self-regulating HIT in young subjects.  相似文献   

16.
We conducted a series of studies to develop and test a rapid, noninvasive method to measure limb venous compliance in humans. First, we measured forearm volume (mercury-in-Silastic strain gauges) and antecubital intravenous pressure during inflation of a venous collecting cuff around the upper arm. Intravenous pressure fit the regression line, -0.3 +/- 0.7 + 0.95 +/- 0.02. cuff pressure (r = 0.99 +/- 0.00), indicating cuff pressure is a good index of intravenous pressure. In subsequent studies, we measured forearm and calf venous compliance by inflating the venous collecting cuff to 60 mmHg for 4 min, then decreasing cuff pressure at 1 mmHg/s (over 1 min) to 0 mmHg, using cuff pressure as an estimate of venous pressure. This method produced pressure-volume curves fitting the quadratic regression (Deltalimb volume) = beta(0) + beta(1). (cuff pressure) + beta(2). (cuff pressure)(2), where Delta is change. Curves generated with this method were reproducible from day to day (coefficient of variation: 4.9%). In 11 subjects we measured venous compliance via this method under two conditions: with and without (in random order) superimposed sympathetic activation (ischemic handgrip exercise to fatigue followed by postexercise ischemia). Calf and forearm compliance did not differ between control and sympathetic activation (P > 0.05); however, the data suggest that unstressed volume was reduced by the maneuver. These studies demonstrate that venous pressure-volume curves can be generated both rapidly and noninvasively with this technique. Furthermore, the results suggest that although whole-limb venous compliance is under negligible sympathetic control in humans, unstressed volume can be affected by the sympathetic nervous system.  相似文献   

17.
We study the arterial and venous circulation of the normal leg by strain gauge plethysmography and venous occlusion (thigh tourniquet). We propose the application of a simplified linear physical model of the venous circulation. It helps to analyse the plethysmographic data recorded during and after the congestion. It ignores the arterial inflow and consider the post-occlusive venous volume decay in function of time as being monoexponential. The venous compliance (C) is measured when the volume has reached a steady-state level during the congestion (known pressure). The time-constant (T) characterizes the volume decay in function of time when the occlusion is released. The tourniquet is successively inflated with two levels of pressure (30 and 60 mm Hg) in order to check if the system is actually linear as predicted by the model. The venous outflow is not strictly monoexponential and the model is only suitable to describe the beginning of the curve. The compliance does not behave linearly, the values measured at 30 mm Hg, being higher than at 60 mm Hg ($ 26%). The time-constant T is slightly influenced by the level of pressures. The calculated resistance is therefore lower at low pressure. We also study the arterial inflow before and after the venous congestion (3 min, 60 mm Hg). We observe a post-venous occlusion hyperaemia (mean rest flow: 5.2%/min, mean hyperemic flow: 12.1%/min) followed by a drop of the inflow (mean minimal flow: 3.4%/min). We evaluate the quantitative influence of neglecting the arterial inflow on the computing of the venous properties. The simplification appears acceptable.  相似文献   

18.
To assess the role of intrapulmonary receptors on the ventilatory responses to exercise we studied six beagle dogs before and after chronic pulmonary denervation and five dogs before and after sham thoracotomies. Each exercise challenge consisted of 6 min of treadmill exercise with measurements taken during the third minute at 3.2 km/h, 0% grade, and during the third minute at 5.0 km/h, 0% grade. Inspiratory and expiratory airflows were monitored with a low-dead-space latex mask and pneumotachographs coupled to differential pressure transducers. Both pre- and postsurgery, all dogs exhibited a significant arterial hypocapnia and alkalosis during exercise. Denervation of the lungs had no significant effect on minute ventilation at rest or during exercise, although there was a lower frequency and higher tidal volume in the lung-denervated dogs at all measurement periods. Breathing frequency increased significantly during exercise in lung-denervated dogs but to a lesser magnitude than in the control dogs. The changes that occurred in breathing frequency in all animals were due predominantly to the shortening of expiratory time. Inspiratory time did not shorten significantly during exercise following lung denervation. We conclude from these data that intrapulmonary receptors which are deafferented by sectioning the vagi at the hilum are not responsible for setting the level of ventilation during rest or exercise but are involved in determining the pattern of breathing.  相似文献   

19.
Effects of spaceflight on human calf hemodynamics.   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Chronic microgravity may modify adaptations of the leg circulation to gravitational pressures. We measured resting calf compliance and blood flow with venous occlusion plethysmography, and arterial blood pressure with sphygmomanometry, in seven subjects before, during, and after spaceflight. Calf vascular resistance equaled mean arterial pressure divided by calf flow. Compliance equaled the slope of the calf volume change and venous occlusion pressure relationship for thigh cuff pressures of 20, 40, 60, and 80 mmHg held for 1, 2, 3, and 4 min, respectively, with 1-min breaks between occlusions. Calf blood flow decreased 41% in microgravity (to 1.15 +/- 0.16 ml x 100 ml(-1) x min(-1)) relative to 1-G supine conditions (1.94 +/- 0.19 ml x 100 ml(-1) x min(-1), P = 0.01), and arterial pressure tended to increase (P = 0.05), such that calf vascular resistance doubled in microgravity (preflight: 43 +/- 4 units; in-flight: 83 +/- 13 units; P < 0.001) yet returned to preflight levels after flight. Calf compliance remained unchanged in microgravity but tended to increase during the first week postflight (P > 0.2). Calf vasoconstriction in microgravity qualitatively agrees with the "upright set-point" hypothesis: the circulation seeks conditions approximating upright posture on Earth. No calf hemodynamic result exhibited obvious mechanistic implications for postflight orthostatic intolerance.  相似文献   

20.
Pregnant animals are less able to maintain mean arterial pressure (MAP) during hemorrhage compared with nonpregnant animals, but the hemodynamic basis of this difference is unknown. The hypothesis that pregnancy attenuates responses of cardiac output, as well as total peripheral resistance (TPR) and femoral conductance, to hemorrhage was tested in conscious rabbits in both the pregnant and nonpregnant state (n = 10). During continuous slow blood loss (2% of the initial blood volume per minute), MAP was maintained initially in both groups. However, MAP then abruptly decreased to <45 mmHg in all animals after a smaller percentage of the initial blood volume was removed in pregnant compared with nonpregnant rabbits (43.6 +/- 1.7%, nonpregnant; 29.6 +/- 2.2%, pregnant; P < 0.005). The more rapid transition to hypotension exhibited by pregnant rabbits was associated with greater initial falls in cardiac output (-56 +/- 10 ml/min, nonpregnant; -216 +/- 33 ml/min, pregnant; P < 0.005) and stroke volume (0.8 +/- 0.1 ml/beat, nonpregnant; -1.3 +/- 0.1 ml/beat, pregnant; P < 0.05). In addition, the increase in TPR as a function of the decrease in cardiac output was markedly attenuated (P < 0.0001) during pregnancy. Whereas femoral conductance decreased in nonpregnant rabbits, it did not change significantly in pregnant animals. In conclusion, the lesser ability of conscious pregnant rabbits to maintain MAP during hemorrhage is due largely to a greater decrease in cardiac output but also to inadequate reflex increases in TPR, possibly in part in the femoral vascular bed.  相似文献   

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