4.6 Article

Impact of eight weeks of repeated ischaemic preconditioning on brachial artery and cutaneous microcirculatory function in healthy males

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE CARDIOLOGY
Volume 22, Issue 8, Pages 1083-1087

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1177/2047487314547657

Keywords

Remote ischaemic preconditioning; microcirculation; endothelial function; cardiovascular risk; vascular adaptation

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Background Ischaemic preconditioning has well-established cardiac and vascular protective effects. Short interventions (one week) of daily ischaemic preconditioning episodes improve conduit and microcirculatory function. This study examined whether a longer (eight weeks) and less frequent (three per week) protocol of repeated ischaemic preconditioning improves vascular function. Methods Eighteen males were randomly allocated to either ischaemic preconditioning (22.42.3 years, 23.73.1kg/m(2)) or a control intervention (26.0 +/- 4.8 years, 26.4 +/- 1.9kg/m(2)). Brachial artery endothelial-dependent (FMD), forearm cutaneous microvascular function and cardiorespiratory fitness were assessed at zero, two and eight weeks. Results A greater improvement in FMD was evident following ischaemic preconditioning training compared with control at weeks 2 (2.24% (0.40, 4.08); p=0.02) and 8 (1.11% (0.13, 2.10); p=0.03). Repeated ischaemic preconditioning did not change cutaneous microcirculatory function or fitness. Conclusions These data indicate that a feasible and practical protocol of regular ischaemic preconditioning episodes improves endothelial function in healthy individuals within two weeks, and these effects persist following repeated ischaemic preconditioning for eight weeks.

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