2 resultados para Nitric oxide synthesis

em Doria (National Library of Finland DSpace Services) - National Library of Finland, Finland


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Virtually every cell and organ in the human body is dependent on a proper oxygen supply. This is taken care of by the cardiovascular system that supplies tissues with oxygen precisely according to their metabolic needs. Physical exercise is one of the most demanding challenges the human circulatory system can face. During exercise skeletal muscle blood flow can easily increase some 20-fold and its proper distribution to and within muscles is of importance for optimal oxygen delivery. The local regulation of skeletal muscle blood flow during exercise remains little understood, but adenosine and nitric oxide may take part in this process. In addition to acute exercise, long-term vigorous physical conditioning also induces changes in the cardiovasculature, which leads to improved maximal physical performance. The changes are largely central, such as structural and functional changes in the heart. The function and reserve of the heart’s own vasculature can be studied by adenosine infusion, which according to animal studies evokes vasodilation via it’s a2A receptors. This has, however, never been addressed in humans in vivo and also studies in endurance athletes have shown inconsistent results regarding the effects of sport training on myocardial blood flow. This study was performed on healthy young adults and endurance athletes and local skeletal and cardiac muscle blod flow was measured by positron emission tomography. In the heart, myocardial blood flow reserve and adenosine A2A receptor density, and in skeletal muscle, oxygen extraction and consumption was also measured. The role of adenosine in the control of skeletal muscle blood flow during exercise, and its vasodilator effects, were addressed by infusing competitive inhibitors and adenosine into the femoral artery. The formation of skeletal muscle nitric oxide was also inhibited by a drug, with and without prostanoid blockade. As a result and conclusion, it can be said that skeletal muscle blood flow heterogeneity decreases with increasing exercise intensity most likely due to increased vascular unit recruitment, but exercise hyperemia is a very complex phenomenon that cannot be mimicked by pharmacological infusions, and no single regulator factor (e.g. adenosine or nitric oxide) accounts for a significant part of exercise-induced muscle hyperemia. However, in the present study it was observed for the first time in humans that nitric oxide is not only important regulator of the basal level of muscle blood flow, but also oxygen consumption, and together with prostanoids affects muscle blood flow and oxygen consumption during exercise. Finally, even vigorous endurance training does not seem to lead to supranormal myocardial blood flow reserve, and also other receptors than A2A mediate the vasodilator effects of adenosine. In respect to cardiac work, atheletes heart seems to be luxuriously perfused at rest, which may result from reduced oxygen extraction or impaired efficiency due to pronouncedly enhanced myocardial mass developed to excel in strenuous exercise.

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Alpha2-Adrenoceptors are cell-surface G protein coupled receptors that mediate many of the effects of the catecholamines noradrenaline and adrenaline. The three human α2-adrenoceptor subtypes are widely expressed in different tissues and organs, and they mediate many different physiological and pharmacological effects in the central and peripheral nervous system and as postsynaptic receptors in target organs. Previous studies have demonstrated that α2-adrenoceptors mediate both vascular constriction and dilatation in humans. Large inter-individual variation has been observed in the vascular responses to α2-adrenoceptor activation in clinical studies. All three receptor subtypes are potential drug targets. It was therefore considered important to further elucidate the details of adrenergic vascular regulation and its genetic variation, since such knowledge may help to improve the development of future cardiovascular drugs and intensive care therapies. Dexmedetomidine is the most selective and potent α2-adrenoceptor agonist currently available for clinical use. When given systemically, dexmedetomidine induces nearly complete sympatholysis already at low concentrations, and postsynaptic effects, such vasoconstriction, can be observed with increasing concentrations. Thus, local infusions of small doses of dexmedetomidine into dorsal hand veins and the application of pharmacological sympathectomy with brachial plexus block provide a means to assess drug-induced peripheral vascular responses without interference from systemic pharmacological effects and autonomic nervous system regulation. Dexmedetomidine was observed to have biphasic effects on haemodynamics, with an initial decrease in blood pressure at low concentrations followed by substantial increases in blood pressure and coronary vascular resistance at high concentrations. Plasma concentrations of dexmedetomidine that significantly exceeded the recommended therapeutic level did not reduce myocardial blood flow below the level that is observed with the usual therapeutic concentrations and did not induce any evident myocardial ischaemia in healthy subjects. Further, it was demonstrated that dexmedetomidine also had significant vasodilatory effects through activation of endothelial nitric oxide synthesis, and thus when the endothelial component of the blood vessel response to dexmedetomidine was inhibited, peripheral vasoconstriction was augmented. Hand vein constriction responses to α2-adrenoceptor activation by dexmedetomidine were only weakly associated with the constriction responses to α1-adrenoceptor activation, pointing to independent cellular regulation by these two adrenoceptor classes. Substantial inter-individual variation was noted in the venous constriction elicited by activation of α2-adrenoceptors by dexmedetomidine. In two study populations from two different continents, a single nucleotide polymorphism in the PRKCB gene was found to be associated with the dorsal hand vein constriction response to dexmedetomidine, suggesting that protein kinase C beta may have an important role in the vascular α2-adrenoceptor signalling pathways activated by dexmedetomidine.