Affiliation:
1. Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx 10461; and Division of Circulatory Physiology, Department of Medicine, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center, New York, New York 10032
Abstract
Katz, Stuart D., Jeannette Yuen, Rachel Bijou, and Thierry H. LeJemtel. Training improves endothelium-dependent vasodilation in resistance vessels of patients with heart failure. J. Appl. Physiol. 82(5): 1488–1492, 1997.—The effects of physical training on endothelium-dependent vasodilation in skeletal muscle resistance vessels were investigated in patients with heart failure. Forearm blood flows (ml ⋅ min−1 ⋅ 100 ml−1) in response to brachial arterial administration of acetylcholine (5 × 10−5 and 5 × 10−4 M at 1 ml/min) and nitroglycerin (5 × 10−6 and 5 × 10−5 M at 1 ml/min) were determined by strain-gauge venous occlusion plethysmography before and after 8 wk of daily handgrip exercise in 12 patients with chronic heart failure. After 8 wk of daily handgrip exercise, the vasodilatory responses to acetylcholine significantly increased from pretraining values, i.e., 16.6 ± 2.0 vs. 8.6 ± 1.3 ml ⋅ min−1 ⋅ 100 ml−1( P < 0.05) and 27.5 ± 1.5 vs. 14.6 ± 1.7 ml ⋅ min−1 ⋅ 100 ml−1( P < 0.05), respect- ively, whereas the vasodilatory responses to nitroglycerin did not change. Handgrip exercise training appears to specifically enhance endothelium-dependent vasodilation in the forearm skeletal muscle circulation of patients with heart failure.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
128 articles.
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