Co-infusion of sulfaphenazole and L-NMMA reduced skeletal muscle blood flow during exercise by 16% compared to control (3.67 vs. 4.29 l/min; P<0.05), whereas sulfaphenazole alone had no effect.
7 males performing knee extensor exercise to evaluate the regulation of skeletal muscle blood flow.
Sulfaphenazole and L-NMMA vs Control
Blood flow during exercise at 9 min — 16 +/- 4 % lower, p=< 0.05
Effect estimate: 16 +/- 4 % lower
Absolute Event Rate: 3.67% vs 4.29%
p-value: p=< 0.05
Previous studies show that exercise-induced hyperaemia is unaffected by systemic inhibition of nitric oxide synthase (NOS) and it has been proposed that this may be due to compensation by other vasodilators. We studied the involvement of cytochrome P450 2C9 (CYP 2C9) in the regulation of skeletal muscle blood flow in humans and the interaction between CYP 2C9 and NOS. Seven males performed knee extensor exercise. Blood flow was measured by thermodilution and blood samples were drawn frequently from the femoral artery and vein at rest, during exercise and in recovery. The protocol was repeated three times on the same day. The first and the third protocols were controls, and in the second protocol either the CYP 2C9 inhibitor sulfaphenazole alone, or sulfaphenazole in combination with the NOS inhibitor N(omega)-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA) were infused. Compared with control there was no difference in blood flow at any time with sulfaphenazole infusion (P > 0.05) whereas with infusion of sulfaphenazole and L-NMMA, blood flow during exercise was 16 +/- 4 % lower than in control (9 min: 3.67 +/- 0.31 vs. 4.29 +/- 0.20 l min(-1); P 0.05). The results demonstrate that CYP 2C9 plays an important role in the regulation of hyperaemia and oxygen uptake during exercise. Since inhibition of neither NOS nor CYP 2C9 alone affect skeletal muscle blood flow, an interaction between CYP 2C9 and NOS appears to exist so that a CYP-dependent vasodilator mechanism takes over when NO production is compromised.
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Thore Hillig
Copenhagen University Hospital
Peter Krustrup
Preventive Cardiology
Ingrid Fleming
Vascular Medicine
The Journal of Physiology
University of Copenhagen
Goethe University Frankfurt
Rigshospitalet
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Hillig et al. (Wed,) conducted a other in Healthy (implied) (n=7). Sulfaphenazole and L-NMMA vs. Control was evaluated on Blood flow during exercise at 9 min (16 +/- 4 % lower, p=< 0.05). Co-infusion of sulfaphenazole and L-NMMA reduced skeletal muscle blood flow during exercise by 16% compared to control (3.67 vs. 4.29 l/min; P<0.05), whereas sulfaphenazole alone had no effect.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a236ebde4968ecc7c4ca453 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.2002.030833