Abstract

On acute cold exposure most animals show a reduction in cardiac output and increased blood viscosity that may seriously impair oxygen supply to peripheral tissue. The apparent increase in capillarisation in response to chronic low temperature may be accompanied by significant muscle atrophy in hibernating mammals, and a rise in capillary density (CD) may then simply reflect a reduced fibre diameter. When hamsters were exposed to reduced temperature and photoperiod, capillary to fibre ratio (C:F) of the tibialis anterior muscle was unchanged (at 2.7) and CD increased by 30% (to 1538 mm −2) following a similar decrease in fibre size. A measure of local C:F decreased around glycolytic fibres, but increased around both oxidative fibre types. When corrected for changes in fibre size, local CD increased around all fibre types in the cold. Fishes are particularly sensitive to fluctuations in environmental temperature, but in contrast to mammals often maintain activity and undergo muscle hypertrophy. Slow (aerobi...

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