Journal of Applied Physiology
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J Appl Physiol 81: 2365-2372, 1996;
8750-7587/96 $5.00
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Journal of Applied Physiology
Vol. 81, No. 6, pp. 2365-2372, December 1996
EXERCISE AND MUSCLE

Regional blood flows in the goat latissimus dorsi muscle before and after chronic stimulation

Richard E. Klabunde, William A. Anderson, Marius Locke, Sigrid E. Ianuzzo, and C. David Ianuzzo

Deborah Research Institute and Department of Surgery, Deborah Heart and Lung Center, Browns Mills, New Jersey 08015

Received 16 January 1996; accepted in final form 18 July 1996.

Klabunde, Richard E., William A. Anderson, Marius Locke, Sigrid E. Ianuzzo, and C. David Ianuzzo. Regional blood flows in the goat latissimus dorsi muscle before and after chronic stimulation. J. Appl. Physiol. 81(6): 2365-2372, 1996.---Latissimus dorsi muscle (LDM) regional blood flows were determined in anesthetized goats by using colored microspheres under noncontracting and contracting conditions, either before or after 8-10 wk of chronic muscle stimulation. Surgical dissection of the LDM, leaving only the thoracodorsal artery to supply the muscle, did not alter regional noncontracting blood flows but significantly reduced the normal hyperemic response to muscle contraction in muscle regions (posterior-medial) furthest from the entrance of the thoracodorsal artery. Eight to 10 wk after acute muscle dissection, posterior-medial hyperemic flows were restored. Chronic stimulation of the LDM for 8-10 wk, in either dissected or nondissected muscles, did not alter regional blood flows in noncontracting muscle; however, it significantly reduced hyperemic flows in all muscle regions, although capillary density was increased and the muscle was transformed into a predominantly type I fiber type. These results, coupled with data from previous experiments, suggest that the muscle damage observed in the posterior-medial regions of the LDM after surgical dissection and chronic stimulation may be related to reduced hyperemic flow responses caused by surgical isolation of the muscle.

cardiomyoplasty; skeletal muscle; muscle contraction; collateral blood flow; ischemia; muscle transformation; capillary density; capillary-to-fiber ratio


0161-7567/96 $5.00 Copyright © 1996 the American Physiological Society




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