To determine the effect of age on quadriceps muscle blood flow (QMBF), leg vascular resistance (LVR), and maximum oxygen uptake (QVO2 max), a thermal dilution technique was used in conjunction with arterial and venous femoral blood sampling in six sedentary young (19.8 +/- 1.3 yr) and six sedentary old (66.5 +/- 2.1 yr) males during incremental knee extensor exercise (KE). Young and old attained a similar maximal KE work rate (WRmax) (young: 25.2 +/- 2.1 and old: 24.1 +/- 4 W) and QVO2 max (young: 0.52 +/- 0.03 and old: 0.42 +/- 0.05 l/min). QMBF during KE was lower in old subjects by approximately 500 ml/min across all work rates, with old subjects demonstrating a significantly lower QMBF/W (old: 174 +/- 20 and young: 239 +/- 46 ml. min-1. W-1). Although the vasodilatory response to incremental KE was approximately 142% greater in the old (young: 0.0019 and old: 0.0046 mmHg. min. ml-1. W-1), consistently elevated leg vascular resistance (LVR) in the old, approximately 80% higher LVR in the old at 50% WR and approximately 40% higher LVR in the old at WRmax (young: 44.1 +/- 3.6 and old: 31.0 +/- 1.7 mmHg. min. ml-1), dictated that during incremental KE the LVR of the old subjects was never less than that of the young subjects. Pulse pressures, indicative of arterial vessel compliance, were approximately 36% higher in the old subjects across all work rates. In conclusion, well-matched sedentary young and old subjects with similar quadriceps muscle mass achieved a similar WRmax and QVO2 max during incremental KE. The old subjects, despite a reduced QMBF, had a greater vasodilatory response to incremental KE. Given that small muscle mass exercise, such as KE, utilizes only a fraction of maximal cardiac output, peripheral mechanisms such as consistently elevated leg vascular resistance and greater pulse pressures appear to be responsible for reduced blood flow persisting throughout graded KE in the old subjects.
We measured leg blood flow (LBF), drew arterial-venous (A-V) blood samples, and calculated muscle O(2) consumption (VO(2)) during incremental cycle ergometry exercise [15, 30, and 99 W and maximal effort (maximal work rate, WR(max))] in nine sedentary young (20 +/- 1 yr) and nine sedentary old (70 +/- 2 yr) males. LBF was preserved in the old subjects at 15 and 30 W. However, at 99 W and at WR(max), leg vascular conductance was attenuated because of a reduced LBF (young: 4.1 +/- 0.2 l/min and old: 3.1 +/- 0.3 l/min) and an elevated mean arterial blood pressure (young: 112 +/- 3 mmHg and old: 132 +/- 3 mmHg) in the old subjects. Leg A-V O(2) difference changed little with increasing WR in the old group but was elevated compared with the young subjects. Muscle maximal VO(2) and cycle WR(max) were significantly lower in the old subjects (young: 0.8 +/- 0.05 l/min and 193 +/- 7 W; old: 0.5 +/- 0.03 l/min and 117 +/- 10 W). The submaximally unchanged and maximally reduced cardiac output associated with aging coupled with its potential maldistribution are candidates for the limited LBF during moderate to heavy exercise in older sedentary subjects.
Incremental knee extensor (KE) exercise performed at 25, 70, and 100% of single-leg maximal work rate (WR(MAX)) was combined with ex vivo electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopic detection of alpha-phenyl-tert-butylnitrone (PBN) adducts, lipid hydroperoxides (LH), and associated parameters in five males. Blood samples were taken from the femoral arterial and venous circulation that, when combined with measured changes in femoral venous blood flow, permitted a direct examination of oxidant exchange across a functionally isolated contracting muscle bed. KE exercise progressively increased the net outflow of LH and PBN adducts (100% > 70% > 25% WR(MAX), P < 0.05) consistent with the generation of secondary, lipid-derived oxygen (O(2))-centered alkoxyl and carbon-centered alkyl radicals. Radical outflow appeared to be more intimately associated with predicted decreases in intracellular Po(2) (iPo(2)) as opposed to measured increases in leg O(2) uptake, with greater outflow recorded between 25 and 70% WR(MAX) (P < 0.05 vs. 70-100% WR(MAX)). This bias was confirmed when radical venoarterial concentration differences were expressed relative to changes in the convective components of O(2) extraction and flow (25-70% WR(MAX) P < 0.05 vs. 70-100% WR(MAX), P > 0.05). Exercise also resulted in a net outflow of other potentially related redox-reactive parameters, including hydrogen ions, norepinephrine, myoglobin, lactate dehydrogenase, and uric acid, whereas exchange of lipid/lipoproteins, ascorbic acid, and selected lipid-soluble anti-oxidants was unremarkable. These findings provide direct evidence for an exercise intensity-dependent increase in free radical outflow across an active muscle bed that was associated with an increase in sarcolemmal membrane permeability. In addition to increased mitochondrial electron flux subsequent to an increase in O(2) extraction and flow, exercise-induced free radical generation may also be regulated by changes in iPo(2), hydrogen ion generation, norepinephrine autoxidation, peroxidation of damaged tissue, and xanthine oxidase activation.
To further explore the limitations to maximal O(2) consumption (.VO(2 max)) in exercise-trained skeletal muscle, six cyclists performed graded knee-extensor exercise to maximum work rate (WR(max)) in hypoxia (12% O(2)), hyperoxia (100% O(2)), and hyperoxia + femoral arterial infusion of adenosine (ADO) at 80% WR(max). Arterial and venous blood sampling and thermodilution blood flow measurements allowed the determination of muscle O(2) delivery and O(2) consumption. At WR(max), O(2) delivery rose progressively from hypoxia (1.0 +/- 0.04 l/min) to hyperoxia (1.20 +/- 0.09 l/min) and hyperoxia + ADO (1.33 +/- 0.05 l/min). Leg .VO(2 max) varied with O(2) availability (0.81 +/- 0.05 and 0.97 +/- 0.07 l/min in hypoxia and hyperoxia, respectively) but did not improve with ADO-mediated vasodilation (0.80 +/- 0.09 l/min in hyperoxia + ADO). Although a vasodilatory reserve in the maximally working quadriceps muscle group may have been evidenced by increased leg vascular conductance after ADO infusion beyond that observed in hyperoxia (increased blood flow but no change in blood pressure), we recognize the possibility that the ADO infusion may have provoked vasodilation in nonexercising tissue of this limb. Together, these findings imply that maximally exercising skeletal muscle may maintain some vasodilatory capacity, but the lack of improvement in leg .VO(2 max) with significantly increased O(2) delivery (hyperoxia + ADO), with a degree of uncertainty as to the site of this dilation, suggests an ADO-induced mismatch between O(2) consumption and blood flow in the exercising limb.
One of the most important factors in the production of cartilage is transforming growth factor beta1 (TGF-beta1). To obtain sustained release of TGF-beta1, a cell-mediated gene therapy technique was introduced. We infected chondrocytes with a retroviral vector carrying the TGF-beta1 gene. The single clone derivative showed sustained TGF-beta1 secretion. It also showed constitutive type II collagen expression. Whereas the TGF-beta1 protein itself is unable to induce formation of cartilage in vivo, human chondrocytes engineered to express a retroviral vector encoding TGF-beta1 showed cartilage formation in vivo when cells were injected into nude mice intradermally. These data suggest that cell-mediated gene therapy using TGF-beta1 as a transgene would be a promising treatment for osteoarthritis.
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