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1 Institute for Exercise and Environmental Medicine, Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas, Dallas 75231; and 2 Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75235
This study tested the
hypothesis that head-down tilt bed rest (HDBR) reduces adrenergic and
nonadrenergic cutaneous vasoconstrictor responsiveness.
Additionally, an exercise countermeasure group was included to
identify whether exercise during bed rest might counteract any
vasoconstrictor deficits that arose during HDBR. Twenty-two subjects
underwent 14 days of strict 6° HDBR. Eight of these 22 subjects did
not exercise during HDBR, while 14 of these subjects exercised on a
supine cycle ergometer for 90 min a day at 75% of pre-bed rest heart
rate maximum. To assess
-adrenergic vasoconstrictor responsiveness,
intradermal microdialysis was used to locally administer norepinephrine
(NE), while forearm skin blood flow (SkBF; laser-Doppler flowmetry) was
monitored over microdialysis membranes. Nonlinear regression modeling
was used to identify the effective drug concentration that caused 50%
of the cutaneous vasoconstrictor response (EC50) and
minimum values from the SkBF-NE dose-response curves. In
addition, the effects of HDBR on nonadrenergic cutaneous
vasoconstriction were assessed via the venoarteriolar response of the
forearm and leg. HDBR did not alter EC50 or the
magnitude of cutaneous vasoconstriction to exogenous NE administration
regardless of whether the subjects exercised during HDBR. Moreover,
HDBR did not alter the forearm venoarteriolar response in either the
control or exercise groups during HDBR. However, HDBR significantly
reduced the magnitude of cutaneous vasoconstriction due to the
venoarteriolar response in the leg, and this response was similarly
reduced in the exercise group. These data suggest that HDBR does not
alter cutaneous vasoconstrictor responses to exogenous NE
administration, whereas cutaneous vasoconstriction of the leg due to
the venoarteriolar response is reduced after HDBR. It remains unclear
whether attenuated venoarteriolar responses in the lower limbs
contribute to reduced orthostatic tolerance after bed rest and spaceflight.
venoarteriolar reflex; norepinephrine; intradermal microdialysis; skin blood flow; simulated microgravity
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