Abstract

Background: Peripheral artery disease (PAD) is one of the major cardiovascular concerns and dramatically reduces the blood flow supply in the affected limbs. A combination of revascularization surgery in the femoral artery and supervised exercise intervention is among the most general approaches for the treatment of PAD. However, the effects of ischemia-reperfusion (IR), which is one of the most predominant complications resulting from the revascularization surgery, on exercise-induced arterial blood pressure (BP) response are poorly understood. Methods: We examined the BP response to static muscle contraction in rats at different time points after the IR procedure. Four groups were included: 1. Sham rats; 2. Rats with 18 hours following IR (IR 18h); 3. Rats with 66 hours following IR (IR 66h); 4. Rats with 114 hours following IR (IR 114h). One-way ANOVA with LSD post-hoc test was applied to analyze the difference among groups. Data were presented as Mean ± Standard Deviation. Results: Compared with Sham group, the BP response to static muscle contraction was significantly increased in rats with all the investigated time points. The response of mean arterial pressure was 19±3 mmHg in Sham rats (n=6); 29±9 mmHg in IR 18h rats (n=8); 26±7 mmHg in IR 66h rats (n=10); 26±4 mmHg in IR 114h rats (n=9) ( P <0.05; the groups at three time courses vs. Sham). There was no significant difference observed in the peak developed tension during muscle contraction among all the groups (Sham rats: 543±101g; IR 18h rats: 520±28g; IR 66h rats: 554±66g; IR 114h rats: 562±45g; P >0.05). Conclusions: IR significantly exaggerates the static exercise-induced BP response. Whereas the BP response tends to decrease with the prolonged IR time, the exaggerated BP response remains through time points from post IR 18 hours to 114 hours. The data suggest that a chronic time course should be considered to alleviate IR-induced ischemic injury in PAD patients for clinical interventions appropriated and exercise.

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