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Regulation of coronary blood flow during exercise.

机译:运动过程中冠状动脉血流的调节。

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Exercise is the most important physiological stimulus for increased myocardial oxygen demand. The requirement of exercising muscle for increased blood flow necessitates an increase in cardiac output that results in increases in the three main determinants of myocardial oxygen demand: heart rate, myocardial contractility, and ventricular work. The approximately sixfold increase in oxygen demands of the left ventricle during heavy exercise is met principally by augmenting coronary blood flow ( approximately 5-fold), as hemoglobin concentration and oxygen extraction (which is already 70-80% at rest) increase only modestly in most species. In contrast, in the right ventricle, oxygen extraction is lower at rest and increases substantially during exercise, similar to skeletal muscle, suggesting fundamental differences in blood flow regulation between these two cardiac chambers. The increase in heart rate also increases the relative time spent in systole, thereby increasing the net extravascular compressive forces acting on the microvasculature within the wall of the left ventricle, in particular in its subendocardial layers. Hence, appropriate adjustment of coronary vascular resistance is critical for the cardiac response to exercise. Coronary resistance vessel tone results from the culmination of myriad vasodilator and vasoconstrictors influences, including neurohormones and endothelial and myocardial factors. Unraveling of the integrative mechanisms controlling coronary vasodilation in response to exercise has been difficult, in part due to the redundancies in coronary vasomotor control and differences between animal species. Exercise training is associated with adaptations in the coronary microvasculature including increased arteriolar densities and/or diameters, which provide a morphometric basis for the observed increase in peak coronary blood flow rates in exercise-trained animals. In larger animals trained by treadmill exercise, the formation of new capillaries maintains capillary density at a level commensurate with the degree of exercise-induced physiological myocardial hypertrophy. Nevertheless, training alters the distribution of coronary vascular resistance so that more capillaries are recruited, resulting in an increase in the permeability-surface area product without a change in capillary numerical density. Maintenance of alpha- and ss-adrenergic tone in the presence of lower circulating catecholamine levels appears to be due to increased receptor responsiveness to adrenergic stimulation. Exercise training also alters local control of coronary resistance vessels. Thus arterioles exhibit increased myogenic tone, likely due to a calcium-dependent protein kinase C signaling-mediated alteration in voltage-gated calcium channel activity in response to stretch. Conversely, training augments endothelium-dependent vasodilation throughout the coronary microcirculation. This enhanced responsiveness appears to result principally from an increased expression of nitric oxide (NO) synthase. Finally, physical conditioning decreases extravascular compressive forces at rest and at comparable levels of exercise, mainly because of a decrease in heart rate. Impedance to coronary inflow due to an epicardial coronary artery stenosis results in marked redistribution of myocardial blood flow during exercise away from the subendocardium towards the subepicardium. However, in contrast to the traditional view that myocardial ischemia causes maximal microvascular dilation, more recent studies have shown that the coronary microvessels retain some degree of vasodilator reserve during exercise-induced ischemia and remain responsive to vasoconstrictor stimuli. These observations have required reassessment of the principal sites of resistance to blood flow in the microcirculation. A significant fraction of resistance is located in small arteries that are outside the metabolic control of the myocardium but are sensitive to shear and nitrovasodilators.
机译:运动是增加心肌需氧量的最重要的生理刺激。锻炼肌肉以增加血流量需要增加心输出量,从而导致心肌需氧量的三个主要决定因素增加:心率,心肌收缩力和心室功。在剧烈运动期间,左心室的需氧量大约增加了六倍,这主要是通过增加冠状动脉血流量(大约5倍)来实现的,因为在这种情况下,血红蛋白浓度和氧气提取(静止时已经为70-80%)仅适度增加。大多数种类。相反,在右心室,静息时的氧气提取量较低,而在运动过程中则明显增加,类似于骨骼肌,表明这两个心脏腔室之间的血流调节存在根本性差异。心率的增加还增加了收缩期的相对时间,从而增加了作用于左心室壁内,尤其是其心内膜下层内的微脉管系统的净血管外压缩力。因此,适当调整冠状血管阻力对于运动对心脏的反应至关重要。冠状动脉阻力血管张力是由无数的血管舒张药和血管收缩药影响(包括神经激素以及内皮和心肌因子)达到顶点而产生的。难以阐明响应运动而控制冠状血管舒张的综合机制,部分原因是由于冠状血管舒缩控制的冗余和动物种类之间的差异。运动训练与冠状动脉微血管的适应有关,包括增加的小动脉密度和/或直径,这为在运动训练的动物中观察到的峰值冠脉血流速度增加提供了形态学基础。在通过跑步机运动训练的较大动物中,新毛细血管的形成将毛细血管密度维持在与运动诱发的生理性心肌肥大程度相对应的水平。然而,训练改变了冠状动脉血管阻力的分布,从而招募了更多的毛细血管,导致通透性表面积乘积的增加而毛细管数值密度没有改变。在较低的儿茶酚胺循环水平下维持α-和ss-肾上腺素的紧张似乎是由于受体对肾上腺素能刺激的反应性增加。运动训练也会改变对冠状动脉阻力血管的局部控制。因此,小动脉表现出增加的肌源性张力,这可能是由于钙依赖性蛋白激酶C信号传导介导的电压门控钙通道活性响应于拉伸而改变。相反,训练会在整个冠状动脉微循环中增加内皮依赖性血管舒张作用。这种增强的响应性似乎主要是由于一氧化氮(NO)合酶表达的增加所致。最后,身体调节可降低静止和可比运动水平下的血管外压力,这主要是因为心率降低。由于心外膜冠状动脉狭窄而导致的冠状动脉流入阻抗导致运动过程中心肌血流从心内膜下层向心外膜下层的明显重新分布。但是,与传统的观点认为心肌缺血会导致最大的微血管扩张相反,最近的研究表明,冠状动脉微血管在运动诱发的缺血过程中保留一定程度的血管扩张剂储备,并对血管收缩剂刺激保持反应。这些观察结果需要重新评估微循环中对血流抵抗的主要部位。很大一部分阻力位于心肌代谢控制之外的小动脉中,但对剪切和硝化血管扩张药敏感。

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