Relation Between Blood Flow and Contraction Force in Active Skeletal Muscle
- 1 January 1962
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation Research
- Vol. 10 (1), 94-104
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.res.10.1.94
Abstract
The relationships between blood flow and contraction force in intermittently contracting eat skeletal muscle during alterations of flow by various procedures were studied. When flow only to the active gastrocuemiussoleus was measured, mechanical reduction in perfusion pressure, sympathetic chain stimulation and intra-arterial norepinephrine and epinephrine infusion were found to have esscritially identical effects in producing reduction in muscle force proportionate to that in blood flow. When flow in the whole leg musculature was measured while either the gastrocnemius-soleus or the quadriceps was active, varying results were obtained with these procedures which could be ascribed to differenees in response of vessels in active and resting muscles. During the carotid sinus reflex some vasoconstrictor activity occurred in active muscle. On the assumption that the maximal, muscle force is an index of the nutritional component of the flow, it may be inferred that, in general, those procedures in which total flow was restricted produced no alteration in distribution of nutritional and non-nutritional flow within the active muscle. Blood flow and muscle force were generally unaffected by concomitant stimulation in the hypothalamus of the sympathetic vasodilator system. An increase in flow and force occasionally was observed whien these were at low levels, or when a rise in arterial pressure occurred. The sympathetic vasodilator system produces no alteration in distibution of flow and would seem to play no role in the maintenance of blood flow and performance of normal active muscle. A fundamental difference appears to exist in the responses of the vasculature of resting and active skeletal muscle; this difference is related to the interplay of specialized effects of the vasomotor innervations and the action of vasodilator metabolites.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Vasodilation in skeletal muscle during activation of patellar reflexAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1961
- Active muscle vasodilatation produced by stimulation of the brain stem: its significance in the defence reactionThe Journal of Physiology, 1960
- Effects of Alterations of Total Muscular Blood Flow on Local Tissue Clearance of Radio-Iodide in the Cat.Acta Physiologica Scandinavica, 1959
- The Effect of Muscle Contraction on the Blood Flow and on the Vascular Responses to Adrenaline, Noradrenaline and Isoprenaline in Individual Skeletal Muscles of the CatJournal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology, 1959
- An Improved Method for Drop Recording of Arterial or Venous Blood Flow.Acta Physiologica Scandinavica, 1958
- General principles governing the behavior of the microcirculationAmerican Journal Of Medicine, 1957
- Activation of Sympathetic Vasodilator Nerves to the Skeletal Muscles in the Cat by Hypothalamic StimulationActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1951
- Vasoconstrictor nerves and oxygen consumption in the isolated perfused hindlimb muscles of the dogThe Journal of Physiology, 1941
- Blood flow during muscle contraction and the orbeli phenomenon in the dogThe Journal of Physiology, 1939
- Vasomotorische RegulationenReviews of physiology, biochemistry and pharmacology, 1931