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J Appl Physiol 96: 1019-1025, 2004. First published October 31, 2003; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00928.2003
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Aging and the skin blood flow response to the unloading of baroreceptors during heat and cold stress

Glaucio Scremin and W. Larry Kenney

Noll Physiological Research Center and Department of Kinesiology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802-6900

Submitted 29 August 2003 ; accepted in final form 27 October 2003

Control of skin blood flow (SkBF) is on the efferent arm of both thermoregulatory and nonthermoregulatory reflexes. To what extent aging may affect the SkBF response when these two reflex systems interact is unknown. To determine the response of aged skin to the unloading of baroreceptors in thermoneutral, cold stress, and heat stress conditions, sequential bouts of nonhypotensive lower body negative pressure (LBNP) were applied at -10, -20, and -30 mmHg in 14 young (18–25 yr) and 14 older (63–78 yr) men. SkBF was measured by laser-Doppler velocimetry (averaged over 2 forearm sites), and data are expressed as percentage of maximal cutaneous vascular conductance (%CVCmax). Total forearm blood flow was measured by venous occlusion plethysmography, and forearm vascular conductance (FVC) was calculated as the ratio of forearm blood flow to mean arterial pressure. In young men, all three intensities of LBNP in thermoneutrality decreased FVC significantly (P < 0.05), but FVC at -10 mmHg did not change in the older men. There were no significant LBNP effects on %CVCmax. Application of LBNP during cold stress did not significantly change %CVCmax or FVC in either age group. During heat stress, -10 to -30 mmHg of LBNP decreased FVC significantly (P < 0.05) in both age groups, but these decreases were attenuated in the older men (P < 0.05). %CVCmax decreased at -30 mmHg in the younger men only. These results suggest that older men have an attenuated skin vasoconstrictor response to the unloading of baroreceptors in heat stress conditions. Furthermore, the forearm vasoconstriction elicited by LBNP in older men reflects that of underlying tissue (i.e., muscle) rather than that of skin, whereas -30 mmHg LBNP also decreases SkBF in young hyperthermic men.

lower body negative pressure; cutaneous blood flow; hyperthermia; vasoconstriction



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: G. Scremin, 119 Noll Physiological Research Center, The Pennsylvania State Univ., Univ. Park, PA 16802-6900 (E-mail: gxs229{at}psu.edu).




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