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Adenosine transporter antagonism in humans augments vasodilator responsiveness to adenosine, but not exercise, in both adenosine responders and non-responders. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated how adenosine (ADO) influences blood flow during exercise, particularly focusing on differences between individuals who are classified as ADO responders and non-responders.
  • Researchers originally thought that blocking ADO transporters would enhance blood vessel dilation in responders without affecting exercise-induced dilation, but found that blocking the transporters actually increased dilation in non-responders as well.
  • The results suggest that non-responders may have heightened ADO transporter activity that limits ADO's effectiveness in causing blood vessel dilation, and that ADO levels during exercise may not be sufficient to significantly impact blood flow in this context.

Article Abstract

' We previously demonstrated a bimodal distribution of forearm vasodilator responsiveness to adenosine (ADO) infusion in the brachial arteries of human subjects. We also demonstrated that ADO receptor antagonism blunted exercise hyperaemia during heavy rhythmic handgripping, but vasodilator responses to exogenous ADO were only blunted in ADO responders. In this study, we continued investigating the contribution of ADO to exercise hyperaemia and possible differences between responders and non-responders. We hypothesized that ADO transporter antagonism would increase vasodilatation in response to exogenous ADO in responders only, but not effect exercise-mediated vasodilation. To test this hypothesis, we compared forearm vascular conductance (FVC) during infusion of ADO to FVC during handgripping before and after infusion of dipyridamole (DIP) in 20 subjects. In ADO responders, change in FVC above baseline (ml min-1 (100 mmHg)-1) for low, medium and high doses of ADO, respectively, was 58 +/- 8, 121 +/- 22 and 184 +/- 38, and after DIP was 192 +/- 32, 238 +/- 50 and 310 +/- 79. For non-responders, these values were 23 +/- 2, 43 +/- 5 and 66 +/- 9, respectively, before DIP (P<0.01 versus responders). Contrary to our hypothesis, these values were increased by DIP in non-responders (P<0.001) and therefore not different from responders (P>0.20). We found that ADO transporter blockade had no effect on exercise hyperaemia in either subgroup. We conclude that there may be increased ADO transporter activity in non-responders resulting in reduced ADO-mediated vasodilatation. The failure of DIP to augment exercise hyperemia under these conditions suggests that ADO concentrations may not rise enough during rhythmic handgripping to have a major impact on these responses.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2075369PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.2006.123000DOI Listing

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