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A Case of Muscle Contraction-Induced Ischemic Limb Hyperemia in a Patient with Peripheral Arterial Disease during Incremental Repeat Isometric Knee Extensor Workloads

A Case of Muscle Contraction-Induced Ischemic Limb Hyperemia in a Patient with Peripheral Arterial Disease during Incremental Repeat Isometric Knee Extensor Workloads
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摘要 <div style="text-align:justify;"> <strong>Background: </strong><span "="">To determine whether muscle contraction-induced leg blood flow (LBF) during exercise may be altered in a patient with an ischemic limb due to peripheral arterial disease (PAD) compared with the non-PAD limb. <b>Case Presentation: </b>A 66-year-old male patient with intermittent claudication due to PAD in the right leg (ankle brachial pressure index, 0.69) showed complete obstruction in both common iliac arteries including internal/external segments with collaterals above the femoral artery and popliteal artery with collaterals, and in the healthy left non-PAD-leg (1.06). He attempted unilateral repeat isometric knee extensions at a target contraction rhythm with each leg at incremental contraction intensities (5%, 10%, and 30% of maximum voluntary contraction [MVC] for 3 min at each intensity). Blood velocity/flow (Doppler ultrasound) in the femoral artery, blood pressure, and leg vascular conductance (LVC) were measured. Isometric thigh MVC strength pre-exercise was similar between the PAD-leg (48.0 kg) and non-PAD-leg (48.7 kg). Pre-exercise LBF (ml/min) was also similar between the PAD-leg (316) and non-PAD-leg (327). Blood pressure increases were similar during exercise. Average exercising LBF in ml/min in the last 1 min at each intensity was higher in the PAD-leg than the non-PAD-leg: 1087 vs. 471 at 5%, 2097 vs. 712 at 10%, and 2656 vs. 1517 at 30% MVC with a close positive linear relationship between LBF and %MVC in the non-PAD-leg (r = 0.999, P</span> <span "="">< 0.01), in agreement with previous findings, but less significant in the PAD-leg (r = 0.879, P = NS), indicating intense vasodilation (increasing LVC) in the PAD-leg compared with the non-PAD-leg. <b>Conclusion: </b>Knee extensor exercising LBF in the femoral artery was dissimilar between the PAD-leg and non-PAD-leg at the same exercise intensity, even though pre-exercising LBF was the same. Further research on the time-course in hemodynamics during leg exercise in PAD might potentially provide insight for the cardiovascular adjustment in severity of arteriosclerosis, stenosis and/or collaterals reserve.</span> </div> <div style="text-align:justify;"> <strong>Background: </strong><span "="">To determine whether muscle contraction-induced leg blood flow (LBF) during exercise may be altered in a patient with an ischemic limb due to peripheral arterial disease (PAD) compared with the non-PAD limb. <b>Case Presentation: </b>A 66-year-old male patient with intermittent claudication due to PAD in the right leg (ankle brachial pressure index, 0.69) showed complete obstruction in both common iliac arteries including internal/external segments with collaterals above the femoral artery and popliteal artery with collaterals, and in the healthy left non-PAD-leg (1.06). He attempted unilateral repeat isometric knee extensions at a target contraction rhythm with each leg at incremental contraction intensities (5%, 10%, and 30% of maximum voluntary contraction [MVC] for 3 min at each intensity). Blood velocity/flow (Doppler ultrasound) in the femoral artery, blood pressure, and leg vascular conductance (LVC) were measured. Isometric thigh MVC strength pre-exercise was similar between the PAD-leg (48.0 kg) and non-PAD-leg (48.7 kg). Pre-exercise LBF (ml/min) was also similar between the PAD-leg (316) and non-PAD-leg (327). Blood pressure increases were similar during exercise. Average exercising LBF in ml/min in the last 1 min at each intensity was higher in the PAD-leg than the non-PAD-leg: 1087 vs. 471 at 5%, 2097 vs. 712 at 10%, and 2656 vs. 1517 at 30% MVC with a close positive linear relationship between LBF and %MVC in the non-PAD-leg (r = 0.999, P</span> <span "="">< 0.01), in agreement with previous findings, but less significant in the PAD-leg (r = 0.879, P = NS), indicating intense vasodilation (increasing LVC) in the PAD-leg compared with the non-PAD-leg. <b>Conclusion: </b>Knee extensor exercising LBF in the femoral artery was dissimilar between the PAD-leg and non-PAD-leg at the same exercise intensity, even though pre-exercising LBF was the same. Further research on the time-course in hemodynamics during leg exercise in PAD might potentially provide insight for the cardiovascular adjustment in severity of arteriosclerosis, stenosis and/or collaterals reserve.</span> </div>
作者 Takuya Osada Takuya Osada(Cardiac Rehabilitation Center, Tokyo Medical University Hospital, Tokyo, Japan;Rehabilitation Center, Tokyo Medical University Hospital, Tokyo, Japan)
出处 《World Journal of Cardiovascular Diseases》 2020年第12期796-808,共13页 心血管病(英文)
关键词 Leg Blood Flow Peripheral Arterial Disease Collaterals Flow Repeat Isometric Knee Extensor Exercise Doppler Ultrasound Leg Blood Flow Peripheral Arterial Disease Collaterals Flow Repeat Isometric Knee Extensor Exercise Doppler Ultrasound
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