AI Article Synopsis

  • Leg venous pressure significantly decreases during upright exercise due to the muscle pump, resulting in increased perfusion pressure and enhanced femoral artery blood flow (FABF).
  • In a study comparing 10 healthy individuals to 10 chronic heart failure (CHF) patients during upright cycling, normal subjects showed a dramatic decrease in mean ankle vein pressure (MAVP) and a 5.3-fold increase in FABF without systemic blood pressure changes.
  • In contrast, CHF patients experienced a smaller decline in MAVP and only a 1.7-fold increase in FABF, indicating that the muscle venous pump mechanism is less effective in those with CHF.

Article Abstract

Leg venous pressure markedly falls during upright exercise via a muscle pump effect, creating de novo perfusion pressure. We examined physiological roles of this mechanism in increasing femoral artery blood flow (FABF) and its alterations in chronic heart failure (CHF). In 10 normal subjects and 10 patients with CHF, standard hemodynamic variables, mean ankle vein pressure (MAVP), and FABF with Doppler techniques were obtained during graded upright bicycle exercise. To evaluate a nonspecific blood flow response, normal subjects also performed supine exercise. In normal subjects, MAVP rapidly declined by 45 mmHg and FABF correspondingly increased 5.3-fold without a systemic pressor response during 10 s of light upright exercise at 5 W. Approximately 67% of the blood flow response was attributed to the venous pressure drop-dependent mechanism. In CHF patients, MAVP declined by only 36 mmHg and FABF increased only 1.7-fold during the same upright exercise. The muscle venous pump has an ability to increase FABF at least threefold via the venous pressure drop-dependent mechanism. This mechanism is impaired in CHF patients.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.01096.2000DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

normal subjects
16
venous pressure
12
upright exercise
12
blood flow
12
subjects patients
8
heart failure
8
exercise muscle
8
flow response
8
declined mmhg
8
mmhg fabf
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!