Renal vascular control during normothermia and passive heat stress does not differ between healthy younger men and women.
Jessica A FreemasMorgan L WorleyMikaela C GablerHayden W HessCurtis S GossTyler B BakerBlair D JohnsonChristopher L ChapmanZachary J SchladerPublished in: American journal of physiology. Renal physiology (2024)
Men are likely at greater risk for heat-induced acute kidney injury compared with women, possibly due to differences in vascular control. We tested the hypothesis that the renal vasoconstrictor and vasodilator responses will be greater in younger women compared with men during passive heat stress. Twenty-five healthy adults [12 women (early follicular phase) and 13 men] completed two experimental visits, heat stress or normothermic time-control, assigned in a block-randomized crossover design. During heat stress, participants wore a water-perfused suit perfused with 50°C water. Core temperature was increased by ∼0.8°C in the first hour before commencing a 2-min cold pressor test (CPT). Core temperature remained clamped and at 1-h post-CPT, subjects ingested a whey protein shake (1.2 g of protein/kg body wt), and measurements were taken pre-, 75 min, and 150 min post-protein. Beat-to-beat blood pressure (Penaz method) was measured and segmental artery vascular resistance (VR, Doppler ultrasound) was calculated as segmental artery blood velocity ÷ mean arterial pressure. CPT-induced increases in segmental artery VR did not differ between trials (trial effect: P = 0.142) nor between men (heat stress: 1.5 ± 1.0 mmHg/cm/s, normothermia: 1.4 ± 1.0 mmHg/cm/s) and women (heat stress: 1.4 ± 1.2 mmHg/cm/s, normothermia: 2.1 ± 1.1 mmHg/cm/s) (group effect: P = 0.429). Reductions in segmental artery VR following oral protein loading did not differ between trials (trial effect: P = 0.080) nor between men (heat stress: -0.6 ± 0.8 mmHg/cm/s, normothermia: -0.6 ± 0.6 mmHg/cm/s) and women (heat stress: -0.5 ± 0.5 mmHg/cm/s, normothermia: -1.1 ± 0.6 mmHg/cm/s) (group effect: P = 0.204). Renal vasoconstrictor responses to the cold pressor test and vasodilator responses following an oral protein load during heat stress or normothermia do not differ between younger men and younger women in the early follicular phase of the menstrual cycle. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The mechanisms underlying greater heat-induced acute kidney injury risk in men versus women remain unknown. This study examined renal vascular control, including both vasodilatory (oral protein load) and vasoconstrictor (cold presser test) responses, during normothermia and heat stress and compared these responses between men and women. The results indicated that in both conditions neither renal vasodilatory nor vasoconstrictor responses differ between younger men and younger women.
Keyphrases
- heat stress
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- heat shock
- acute kidney injury
- pregnancy outcomes
- blood pressure
- middle aged
- cervical cancer screening
- breast cancer risk
- protein protein
- clinical trial
- randomized controlled trial
- magnetic resonance imaging
- amino acid
- open label
- insulin resistance
- diabetic rats
- phase iii
- pregnant women
- study protocol
- computed tomography
- phase ii
- binding protein
- cardiac surgery
- heart rate
- oxidative stress
- drug induced
- placebo controlled
- heat shock protein
- virtual reality