Basic Science Review: The Myopathy of Peripheral Arterial Occlusive Disease: Part 2. Oxidative Stress, Neuropathy, and Shift in Muscle Fiber Type

Author:

Pipinos Iraklis I.1,Judge Andrew R.2,Selsby Joshua T.2,Zhen Zhu 3,Swanson Stanley A.3,Nella Aikaterini A.3,Dodd Stephen L.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, University of Nebraska Medical Center and Nebraska-Western Iowa Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska,

2. Department of Applied Physiology and Kinesiology, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida

3. Department of Surgery, University of Nebraska Medical Center and Nebraska-Western Iowa Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska

Abstract

In recent years, an increasing number of studies have demonstrated that a myopathy is present, contributes, and, to a certain extent, determines the pathogenesis of peripheral arterial occlusive disease. These works provide evidence that a state of repetitive cycles of exercise-induced ischemia followed by reperfusion at rest operates in patients with peripheral arterial occlusive disease and mediates a large number of structural and metabolic changes in the muscle, resulting in reduced strength and function. The key players in this process appear to be defective mitochondria that, through multilevel failure in their roles as energy, oxygen radical species, and apoptosis regulators, produce and sustain a progressive decline in muscle performance. In this 2-part review, the currently available evidence that characterizes the nature and mechanisms responsible for this myopathy is highlighted. In part 1, the functional and histomorphological characteristics of the myopathy were reviewed, and the main focus was on the biochemistry and bioenergetics of its mitochondriopathy. In part 2, accumulating evidence that oxidative stress related to ischemia reperfusion is probably the major operating mechanism of peripheral arterial occlusive disease myopathy is reviewed. Important new findings of a possible neuropathy and a shift in muscle fiber type are also reviewed. Learning more about these mechanisms will enhance our understanding of the degree to which they are preventable and treatable.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,General Medicine,Surgery

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