Reducing antegrade shear rate via unilateral cuff inflation during exercise or heating abolished the increase in flow-mediated dilation observed in the noncuffed arm (interaction P<0.05).
Does shear rate modulation via cuff inflation alter flow-mediated dilation in response to exercise and heating in healthy young men?
Differences in the magnitude of antegrade shear rate directly transduce differences in endothelial vasodilator function in humans, highlighting a mechanism for vascular adaptation to exercise.
p-value: p=<0.05
Shear stress is an important stimulus to arterial adaptation in response to exercise and training in humans. We recently observed significant reverse arterial flow and shear during exercise and different antegrade/retrograde patterns of shear and flow in response to different types of exercise. The purpose of this study was to simultaneously examine flow-mediated dilation, a largely NO-mediated vasodilator response, in both brachial arteries of healthy young men before and after 30-minute interventions consisting of bilateral forearm heating, recumbent leg cycling, and bilateral handgrip exercise. During each intervention, a cuff inflated to 60 mm Hg was placed on 1 arm to unilaterally manipulate the shear rate stimulus. In the noncuffed arm, antegrade flow and shear increased similarly in response to each intervention (ANOVA; P<0.001, no interaction between interventions; P=0.71). Baseline flow-mediated dilation (4.6%, 6.9%, and 6.7%) increased similarly in response to heating, handgrip, and cycling (8.1%, 10.4%, and 8.9%, ANOVA; P<0.001, no interaction; P=0.89). In contrast, cuffed arm antegrade shear rate was lower than in the noncuffed arm for all of the conditions (P<0.05), and the increase in flow-mediated dilation was abolished in this arm (4.7%, 6.7%, and 6.1%; 2-way ANOVA: all conditions interacted P<0.05). These results suggest that differences in the magnitude of antegrade shear rate transduce differences in endothelial vasodilator function in humans, a finding that may have relevance for the impact of different exercise interventions on vascular adaptation in humans.
Tinken et al. (Tue,) conducted a other in Healthy. Unilateral cuff inflation during exercise or heating vs. Noncuffed arm was evaluated on Flow-mediated dilation (p=<0.05). Reducing antegrade shear rate via unilateral cuff inflation during exercise or heating abolished the increase in flow-mediated dilation observed in the noncuffed arm (interaction P<0.05).
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: