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Control of blood pressure in the cold: differentiation of skin and skeletal muscle vascular resistance.

Hendrik MugeleKyohei MarumeSachin B AminCarmen PossnigLucie C KühnLydia RiehlRobin PieperEva-Lotte SchabbehardSamuel J OliverDaniel GagnonJustin S Lawley
Published in: Experimental physiology (2022)
The primary aim of this investigation was to determine the individual contribution of the cutaneous and skeletal muscle circulations to the cold-induced pressor response. To address this, we examined local vascular resistances in the cutaneous and skeletal muscle of the arm and leg. Thirty-four healthy individuals underwent three different protocols, whereby cold air to clamp skin temperature (27°C) was passed over (1) the whole-body, (2) the whole-body, but with the forearm pre-cooled to clamp cutaneous vascular resistance, and (3) the face. Cold exposure applied to the whole body or isolated to the face increased mean arterial pressure (all, P < 0.001) and total peripheral resistance (all, P < 0.047) compared to thermal neutral baseline. Whole-body cooling increased femoral (P < 0.005) and brachial artery resistance (P < 0.003) compared to thermoneutral baseline. Moreover, when the forearm was pre-cooled to remove the contribution of cutaneous resistance (P = 0.991), there was a further increase in lower arm vasoconstriction (P = 0.036) when whole-body cooling was superimposed. Face cooling also caused a reflex increase in lower arm cutaneous (P = 0.009) and brachial resistance (P = 0.050), yet there was no change in femoral resistance (P = 0.815) despite a reflex increase in leg cutaneous resistance (P = 0.010). Cold stress causes an increase in blood pressure through a change in total peripheral resistance that is largely due to cutaneous vasoconstriction with face cooling, but there is additional vasoconstriction in the skeletal muscle vasculature with whole-body cooling.
Keyphrases
  • skeletal muscle
  • blood pressure
  • insulin resistance
  • type diabetes
  • heart rate
  • oxidative stress
  • weight loss
  • stress induced
  • drug induced
  • high glucose
  • heat stress