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Critical Care and Respiratory Divisions, Department of Medicine, Royal Victoria Hospital, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec H3A 1A1, Canada
Hussain, Sabah N. A. Regulation of ventilatory muscle
blood flow. J. Appl. Physiol. 81(4):
1455-1468, 1996.
The ventilatory muscles perform various
functions such as ventilation of the lungs, postural stabilization, and
expulsive maneuvers (e.g., coughing). They are classified in functional
terms as inspiratory muscles, which include the diaphragm, parasternal
intercostal, external intercostal, scalene, and sternocleidomastoid
muscles; and expiratory muscles, which include the abdominal muscles,
internal intercostal, and triangularis sterni. The ventilatory muscles
require high-energy phosphate compounds such as ATP to fuel the
biochemical and physical processes of contraction and relaxation.
Maintaining adequate intracellular concentrations of these compounds
depends on adequate intracellular substrate levels and delivery of
these substrates by arterial blood flow. In addition to the delivery of
substrates, blood flow influences muscle function through the removal
of metabolic by-products, which, if accumulated, could exert negative
effects on several excitatory and contractile processes. Skeletal
muscle substrate utilization is also dependent on the ability to
extract substrates from arterial blood, which, in turn, is accomplished by increasing the total number of perfused capillaries. It follows that
matching perfusion to metabolic demands is critical for the maintenance
of normal muscle contractile function. In this article, I review the
factors that influence ventilatory muscle blood flow. Major emphasis is
placed on the diaphragm because a large number of published reports
deal with diaphragmatic blood flow. The second reason for focusing on
the diaphragm is because it is the largest and most important
inspiratory muscle.
inspiratory muscles; expiratory muscles; diaphragm; substrates
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