4.6 Article

Augmentation of endothelium-dependent vasodilatory signalling improves functional sympatholysis in contracting muscle of older adults

期刊

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
卷 598, 期 12, 页码 2323-2336

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/JP279462

关键词

ageing; blood flow control; endothelium-derived hyperpolarization

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [HL102720, HL095573, HL119337]

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Key points The ability of contracting skeletal muscle to attenuate sympathetic vasoconstriction (functional sympatholysis) is critical for maintaining blood flow during exercise-mediated sympathoexcitation. Functional sympatholysis and endothelial function are impaired with ageing, resulting in compromised blood flow and oxygen delivery to contracting skeletal muscle during exercise. In the present study, intra-arterial infusion of ACh or ATP to augment endothelium-dependent signalling during exercise attenuated alpha(1)-adrenergic vasoconstriction in the contracting muscle of older adults. The vascular signalling mechanisms capable of functional sympatholysis are preserved in healthy ageing, and thus the age-related impairment in functional sympatholysis probably results from the loss of a functional signal (e.g. plasma [ATP]) as opposed to an intrinsic endothelial dysfunction. The ability of contracting skeletal muscle to attenuate sympathetic alpha-adrenergic vasoconstriction ('functional sympatholysis') is impaired with age. In young adults, increasing endothelium-dependent vasodilatory signalling during mild exercise augments sympatholysis. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that increasing endothelium-dependent signalling during exercise in older adults can improve sympatholysis. In 16 older individuals (Protocol 1, n = 8; Protocol 2, n = 8), we measured forearm blood flow (Doppler ultrasound) and calculated changes in vascular conductance (FVC) to local intra-arterial infusion of phenylephrine (PE; alpha(1)-agonist) during (i) infusion of an endothelium-dependent vasodilator alone (Protocol 1: ACh or Protocol 2: low dose ATP); (ii) mild handgrip exercise (5% maximum voluntary contraction; MVC); (iii) moderate handgrip exercise (15% MVC); and (iv) mild or moderate handgrip exercise + infusion of ACh or ATP to augment endothelium-dependent signalling. PE caused robust vasoconstriction in resting skeletal muscle during control vasodilator infusions (Delta FVC: ACh: -31 +/- 3 and ATP: -30 +/- 4%). PE-mediated vasoconstriction was not attenuated by mild or moderate intensity exercise (Delta FVC: 5% MVC: -30 +/- 9; 15% MVC: -33 +/- 8%; P > 0.05 vs. control ACh and ATP), indicative of impaired sympatholysis, and ACh or ATP infusion during mild exercise did not impact this response. However, augmentation of endothelium-dependent signalling via infusion of ACh or ATP during moderate intensity exercise attenuated PE-mediated vasoconstriction (Delta FVC: -13 +/- 1 and -19 +/- 5%, respectively; P vs. all conditions). Our findings demonstrate that, given a sufficient stimulus, endothelium-dependent sympatholysis remains intact in older adults. Strategies aimed at activating such pathways represent a viable approach for improving sympatholysis and thus tissue blood flow and oxygen delivery in older adults.

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