Comparison of exogenous adenosine and voluntary exercise on human skeletal muscle perfusion and perfusion heterogeneity

2010 
Adenosine is a widely used pharmacological agent to induce a “high-flow” control condition to study the mechanisms of exercise hyperemia, but it is not known how well an adenosine infusion depicts exercise-induced hyperemia, especially in terms of blood flow distribution at the capillary level in human muscle. Additionally, it remains to be determined what proportion of the adenosine-induced flow elevation is specifically directed to muscle only. In the present study, we measured thigh muscle capillary nutritive blood flow in nine healthy young men using PET at rest and during the femoral artery infusion of adenosine (1 mgmin−1l thigh volume−1), which has previously been shown to induce a maximal whole thigh blood flow of ∼8 l/min. This response was compared with the blood flow induced by moderate- to high-intensity one-leg dynamic knee extension exercise. Adenosine increased muscle blood flow on average to 40 ± 7 ml·min−1·100 g muscle−1 with an aggregate value of 2.3 ± 0.6 l/min for the whole thigh muscu...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    56
    References
    58
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []