Sex-related differences in rapid-onset vasodilation: impact of aging.

J Appl Physiol (1985)

Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation Science, Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa.

Published: January 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how aging and sex influence rapid-onset vasodilation (ROV) during single muscle contractions in young and older adults.
  • Women showed consistently lower peak ROV compared to men across different contraction intensities, particularly in older participants.
  • The findings suggest that while aging affects ROV, older women experience a more pronounced reduction in response compared to older men, indicating important sex-related differences in muscle blood flow responses.

Article Abstract

Rapid-onset vasodilation (ROV) in response to a single muscle contraction is attenuated with aging. Moreover, sex-related differences in muscle blood flow and vasodilation during dynamic exercise have been observed in young and older adults. The purpose of the present study was to explore if sex-related differences in ROV exist in young ( = 36, 25 ± 1 yr) and older ( = 32, 66 ± 1 yr) adults. Subjects performed single forearm contractions at 10%, 20%, and 40% maximal voluntary contraction. Brachial artery blood velocity and diameter were measured with Doppler ultrasound, and forearm vascular conductance (mL·min·100 mmHg) was calculated from blood flow (mL·min) and mean arterial pressure (mmHg) and used as a measure of ROV. Peak ROV was attenuated in women across all relative intensities in the younger and older groups ( < 0.05). In a subset of subjects with similar absolute workloads (∼5 kg and ∼11 kg), age-related differences in ROV were observed among both women and men ( < 0.05). However, only older women demonstrated an attenuated peak ROV compared with men (91 ± 6 vs. 121 ± 11 mL·min·100 mmHg, < 0.05), a difference not observed in the young group (134 ± 8 vs. 154 ± 11 mL·min·100 mmHg, = 0.15). Additionally, examining the slope of peak ROV across contraction intensities indicated a blunted response in older women compared with their younger counterparts ( < 0.05), with no differences observed between older and young men ( = 0.38). Our data suggest that sex-related differences in the rapid vasodilatory response to single muscle contractions exist in older but not young adults, such that older women have a blunted response compared with older men. While rapid-onset vasodilation (ROV) has been shown to decrease in older individuals, it is unclear if sex contributes to the decline with aging. We sought to identify if sex-related differences exist in the ROV response to single forearm contractions in young and older adults. Our data suggest sex-related differences are present among older but not young individuals, with women having an attenuated response. These data indicate sex plays a role in decreased vasodilation with aging.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7944924PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00663.2020DOI Listing

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