AI Article Synopsis

  • Adipose tissue blood flow was measured in dogs during exercise, showing variations across different fat depots.
  • Blood flow to inguinal, subcutaneous fat increased from 6 ml/(100 g . min) at rest to 10 ml/(100 g . min) during exercise, which was less than the marked increase observed in other depots like perirenal and mesenteric.
  • Overall, blood flow increases during exercise are common across all major adipose tissue depots, although the inguinal region exhibited lower increases compared to some abdominal regions.

Article Abstract

Adipose tissue blood flow was measured by the microsphere technique in all major adipose tissue depots in dogs during exercise. The measurements were done during rest, after 1 and 2 h of exercise and after a postexercise rest period. It was found that the blood flow to the inguinal, subcutaneous adipose tissue increased from about 6 ml/(100 g . min) during rest to about 10 ml/(100 g.min) during exercise. This increase in flow was significantly smaller than the increase found in the perirenal, the mesenteric and the pericardial depots. In these depots the resting blood flow was about 10 ml/(100 g . min) increasing to about 30 ml/(100 g . min) during exercise. It is concluded that the increase in adipose tissue blood flow during exercise is a general phenomenon for all major adipose tissue depots. The increase in flow in the inguinal, subcutaneous fat pad was comparable to the previously described increase in flow in abdominal, subcutaneous tissue in man. Blood flow to abdominal skin was constant during exercise, while the flow in tissues from the gastrointestinal canal and in the kidneys decreased. The flow in the tongue and in the Achilles tendon significantly increased during exercise.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00584302DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

blood flow
24
adipose tissue
24
tissue depots
12
ml/100 min
12
increase flow
12
flow
10
exercise
8
tissue blood
8
major adipose
8
flow inguinal
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!