'Distensibility' of the papaverine-relaxed vascular bed in human subcutaneous tissue.
Klíčová slova
Abstraktní
The effect of an increase in vascular transmural pressure upon the blood flow in two subcutaneous vascular beds, maximally dilated by papaverine was studied in 6 healthy humans. Blood flow was measured on the dorsum of the hand and at the lateral malleolus by the local 133Xe washout technique. Increase in vascular transmural pressure was induced by lowering the labelled area various distances below heart level. Lowering the area caused an increase in blood flow. The increase was less pronounced in the legs than in the hand. As arterial perfusion pressure head remained constant during lowering, this indicates that the relative decrease in vascular resistance was smaller in the leg than in the hand. Experimental edema did not influence the relative decrease in vascular resistance. The results suggest that 'distensibility' of the resistance vessels is smaller in the leg than in the hand. This might be due to a structural adaptation of the vascular wall in vessels often subjected to increased hydrostatic pressure.