Effects of L-type voltage-gated Ca2+ channel blockade on cholinergic and thermal sweating in habitually trained and untrained men

Author:

Amano Tatsuro1ORCID,Fujii Naoto2ORCID,Kenny Glen P.3,Okamoto Yumi1,Inoue Yoshimitsu4,Kondo Narihiko5

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory for Exercise and Environmental Physiology, Faculty of Education, Niigata University, Niigata, Japan

2. Faculty of Health and Sport Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba City, Japan

3. Human and Environmental Physiology Research Unit, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada

4. Laboratory for Human Performance Research, Osaka International University, Osaka, Japan

5. Laboratory for Applied Human Physiology, Graduate School of Human Development and Environment, Kobe University, Kobe, Japan

Abstract

We evaluated the hypothesis that the activation of L-type voltage-gated Ca2+ channels contributes to exercise training-induced augmentation in cholinergic sweating. On separate days, 10 habitually trained and 10 untrained men participated in two experimental protocols. Prior to each protocol, we administered 1% verapamil (Verapamil, L-type voltage-gated Ca2+ channel blocker) and saline (Control) at forearm skin sites on both arms via transdermal iontophoresis. In protocol 1, we administered low (0.001%) and high (1%) doses of pilocarpine at both the verapamil-treated and verapamil-untreated forearm sites. In protocol 2, participants were passively heated by immersing their limbs in hot water (43°C) until rectal temperature increased by 1.0°C above baseline resting levels. Sweat rate at all forearm sites was continuously measured throughout both protocols. Pilocarpine-induced sweating in Control was higher in trained than in untrained men for both the concentrations of pilocarpine (both P ≤ 0.001). Pilocarpine-induced sweating at the low-dose site was attenuated at the Verapamil versus the Control site in both the groups (both P ≤ 0.004), albeit the reduction was greater in trained as compared with in untrained men ( P = 0.005). The verapamil-mediated reduction in sweating remained intact at the high-dose pilocarpine site in the untrained men ( P = 0.004) but not the trained men ( P = 0.180). Sweating did not differ between Control and Verapamil sites with increases in rectal temperature in both groups (interaction, P = 0.571). We show that activation of L-type voltage-gated Ca2+ channels modulates sweat production in habitually trained men induced by a low dose of pilocarpine. However, no effect on sweating was observed during passive heating in either group.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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