Does static handgrip exercise affect renal arterial pressure and flow in humans?
Humans
Static handgrip exercise with direct invasive renal arterial pressure and flow velocity measurements
Changes in renal arterial pressure and flowsurrogate
Direct invasive measurements show that static handgrip exercise increases renal arterial pressure and decreases flow, highlighting inter-individual variability in renal sympathetic control.
Renal sympathetic innervation is important in the homeostasis of systemic and renal hemodynamics. We showed that renal arterial pressure significantly increased and that flow decreased during static handgrip exercise using direct renal arterial pressure and flow measurements in humans, but with a large difference between individuals. These findings may be useful for future studies aimed to assess the effect of interventions that influence renal sympathetic control.
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Didier Collard
Amsterdam Neuroscience
Lennart van de Velde
Amsterdam Neuroscience
Valérie Stegehuis
AJP Renal Physiology
University of Amsterdam
University of Twente
Amsterdam University Medical Centers
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Collard et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1a7d1e9fa30811a0b8ada0 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1152/ajprenal.00031.2023