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. 1989 Feb;135(2):83-94.
doi: 10.1111/j.1748-1716.1989.tb08555.x.

Metabolic control of large-bore arterial resistance vessels, arterioles, and veins in cat skeletal muscle during exercise

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Metabolic control of large-bore arterial resistance vessels, arterioles, and veins in cat skeletal muscle during exercise

J Björnberg et al. Acta Physiol Scand. 1989 Feb.

Abstract

The metabolic control of the vascular bed in cat gastrocnemius muscle during exercise was studied with a new technique (Björnberg et al. 1988) permitting continuous and simultaneous recordings of arteriolar and capillary pressures, and of resistances in the following consecutive vascular section: proximal arterial resistance vessels greater than 25 microns, arterioles less than 25 microns, and on the venous side. The study thereby provided quantitative data for resistance and active intrinsic tone in these vascular segments at rest, during graded exercise vasodilatation, and in the post-exercise period. Slight activation of the metabolic control system by low-frequency somatomotor nerve stimulation ('light exercise') caused inhibition of intrinsic tone and decreased vascular resistance selectively in the arteriolar section. At increasing workloads, arteriolar resistance was further decreased, but resistance and tone in the proximal arterial resistance vessels and the veins then became clearly reduced as well. This difference in effectiveness of the metabolic control system on the different segments of the vascular bed was expressed quantitatively in terms of a 'metabolic vasodilator index'. Graded activation of the metabolic control system led to a marked segmental redistribution of intrinsic vascular tone, in turn resulting in an increased pressure drop across the proximal arterial vessels in the veins and a decreased pressure drop over the arterioles. The observed decrease in the pre- to post-capillary resistance ratio caused, at a constant arterial pressure of 100 mmHg, a graded increase in capillary pressure with increasing workloads, at maximum vasodilatation by an average value of 14 mmHg above the resting control value of 15.4 +/- 0.6 mmHg. In the post-exercise period, recovery of vascular tone to control was more rapid in the proximal arterial resistance vessels and the veins than in the arteriolar segment.

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