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Regulation of coronary resistance vessel tone in response to exercise

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ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.yjmcc.2011.10.007

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Coronary blood flow; Exercise; Hyperemia; Oxygen extraction; Vascular resistance

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Exercise is a primary stimulus for increased myocardial oxygen demand. The similar to 6-fold increase in oxygen demand of the left ventricle during heavy exercise is met principally by augmenting coronary blood flow (similar to 5-fold), as hemoglobin concentration and oxygen extraction (which is already similar to 70% at rest) increase only modestly in most species. As a result, coronary blood flow is tightly coupled to myocardial oxygen consumption over a wide range of physical activity. This tight coupling has been proposed to depend on periarteriolar oxygen tension, signals released from cardiomyocytes and the endothelium as well as neurohumoral influences, but the contribution of each of these regulatory pathways, and their interactions, to exercise hyperemia in the heart remain incompletely understood. In humans, nitric oxide, adenosine and K-ATP channels each appear to contribute to resting coronary resistance vessel tone, but evidence for a critical contribution to exercise hyperemia is lacking. In dogs K-ATP-channel activation together with adenosine and nitric oxide contribute to exercise hyperemia in a non-linear redundant fashion. In contrast, in swine nitric oxide, adenosine and K-ATP channels contribute to resting coronary resistance vessel tone control in a linear additive manner, but do not appear to be mandatory for exercise hyperemia. Rather, exercise hyperemia in swine appears to involve beta-adrenergic activation in conjunction with exercise-induced blunting of an endothelin-mediated vasoconstrictor influence. In view of these remarkable species differences in coronary vasomotor control during exercise, future studies are required to determine the system of vasodilator components that mediate exercise hyperemia in humans. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Coronary Blood Flow. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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