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Physiological Impact and Clinical Relevance of Passive Exercise/Movement.

Joel D TrinityRussell S Richardson
Published in: Sports medicine (Auckland, N.Z.) (2020)
Passive exercise/movement has a long history in both medicine and physiology. Early clinical applications of passive exercise/movement utilized pneumatic and direct limb compression to stimulate the vasculature and evoke changes in blood flow to avoid complications brought about by stasis and vascular disease. Over the last 50 years, passive exercise/movement has continued to progress and has provided physiologists with a reductionist approach to mechanistically examine the cardiorespiratory, hyperemic, and afferent responses to movement without the confounding influence of metabolism that accompanies active exercise. This review, in addition to providing an historical perspective, focuses on the recent advancements utilizing passive leg movement, and how the hyperemic response at the onset of this passive movement has evolved from a method to evaluate the central and peripheral regulation of blood flow during exercise to an innovative and promising tool to assess vascular function. As an assessment of vascular function, passive leg movement is relatively simple to perform and provides a nitric oxide-dependent evaluation of endothelial function across the lifespan that is sensitive to changes in activity/fitness and disease state (heart failure, peripheral artery disease, sepsis). The continual refinement and characterization of passive leg movement are aimed at improving our understanding of blood flow regulation and the development of a clinically ready approach to predict and monitor the progression of cardiovascular disease.
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