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The impact of leg position on muscle blood flow and oxygenation during low-intensity rhythmic plantarflexion exercise

PURPOSE: Resistance training (RT) is an effective countermeasure to combat physical deconditioning whereby localized hypoxia within the limb increases metabolic stress eliciting muscle adaptation. The current study sought to examine the influence of gravity on muscle oxygenation (SmO(2)) alongside v...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Marume, Kyohei, Mugele, Hendrik, Ueno, Ryo, Amin, Sachin B., Lesmana, Heru Syarli, Possnig, Carmen, Hansen, Alexander B., Simpson, Lydia L., Lawley, Justin S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10119266/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36645478
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00421-022-05117-9
Descripción
Sumario:PURPOSE: Resistance training (RT) is an effective countermeasure to combat physical deconditioning whereby localized hypoxia within the limb increases metabolic stress eliciting muscle adaptation. The current study sought to examine the influence of gravity on muscle oxygenation (SmO(2)) alongside vascular hemodynamic responses. METHODS: In twelve young healthy adults, an ischemic occlusion test and seven minutes of low-intensity rhythmic plantarflexion exercise were used alongside superficial femoral blood flow and calf near-infrared spectroscopy to assess the microvascular vasodilator response, conduit artery flow-mediated dilation, exercise-induced hyperemia, and SmO(2) with the leg positioned above or below the heart in a randomized order. RESULTS: The microvascular vasodilator response, assessed by peak blood flow (798 ± 231 mL/min vs. 1348 ± 290 mL/min; p < 0.001) and reperfusion slope 10 s of SmO(2) after cuff deflation (0.75 ± 0.45%.s-1 vs.2.40 ± 0.94%.s-1; p < 0.001), was attenuated with the leg above the heart. This caused a blunted dilatation of the superficial femoral artery (3.0 ± 2.4% vs. 5.2 ± 2.1%; p = 0.008). Meanwhile, blood flow area under the curve was comparable (above the heart: 445 ± 147 mL vs. below the heart: 474 ± 118 mL; p = 0.55) in both leg positions. During rhythmic exercise, the increase in femoral blood flow was lower in the leg up position (above the heart: 201 ± 94% vs. below the heart: 292 ± 114%; p = 0.001) and contributed to a lower SmO(2) (above the heart: 41 ± 18% vs. below the heart 67 ± 5%; p < 0.001). CONCLUSION: Positioning the leg above the heart results in attenuated peak vascular dilator response and exercise-induced hyperemia that coincided with a lower SmO(2) during low-intensity plantarflexion exercise.