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J Appl Physiol 94: 6-10, 2003. First published August 16, 2002; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00337.2002
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Vol. 94, Issue 1, 6-10, January 2003

Muscle pump does not enhance blood flow in exercising skeletal muscle

Jason J. Hamann, Zoran Valic, John B. Buckwalter, and Philip S. Clifford

Medical College of Wisconsin and Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53295

The muscle pump theory holds that contraction aids muscle perfusion by emptying the venous circulation, which lowers venous pressure during relaxation and increases the pressure gradient across the muscle. We reasoned that the influence of a reduction in venous pressure could be determined after maximal pharmacological vasodilation, in which the changes in vascular tone would be minimized. Mongrel dogs (n = 7), instrumented for measurement of hindlimb blood flow, ran on a treadmill during continuous intra-arterial infusion of saline or adenosine (15-35 mg/min). Adenosine infusion was initiated at rest to achieve the highest blood flow possible. Peak hindlimb blood flow during exercise increased from baseline by 438 ± 34 ml/min under saline conditions but decreased by 27 ± 18 ml/min during adenosine infusion. The absence of an increase in blood flow in the vasodilated limb indicates that any change in venous pressure elicited by the muscle pump was not adequate to elevate hindlimb blood flow. The implication of this finding is that the hyperemic response to exercise is primarily attributable to vasodilation in the skeletal muscle vasculature.

contraction; dog; vasodilation; exercise hyperemia; muscle contraction


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