Abstract

Near-infrared diffuse correlation spectroscopy (NIR-DCS) is an optical imaging technique for measuring relative changes in skeletal muscle microvascular perfusion (i.e., fold change above baseline) during reactive hyperemia testing and exercise and is reported as a blood flow index (BFI). Although it is generally accepted that changes in BFI are primarily driven by changes in muscle perfusion, it is well known that large, hyperthermia-induced changes in cutaneous blood flow can uncouple this relationship. What remains unknown, is how much of an impact that changes in cutaneous perfusion have on NIR-DCS BFI and estimates of skeletal muscle perfusion under thermoneutral conditions, where changes in cutaneous blood flow are assumed to be relatively low. We therefore used epinephrine iontophoresis to pharmacologically block changes in cutaneous perfusion throughout a battery of experimental procedures. The data show that 1) epinephrine iontophoresis attenuates changes in cutaneous perfusion for up to 4-h posttreatment, even in the face of significant neural and local stimuli, 2) under thermoneutral conditions, cutaneous perfusion does not significantly impact NIR-DCS BFI during reactive hyperemia testing or moderate-intensity exercise, and 3) during passive whole body heat stress, when cutaneous vasodilation is pronounced, epinephrine iontophoresis preserves NIR-DCS measures of skeletal muscle BFI during moderate-intensity exercise. Collectively, these data suggest that cutaneous perfusion is unlikely to have a major impact on NIR-DCS estimates of skeletal muscle BFI under thermoneutral conditions, but that epinephrine iontophoresis can be used to abolish cutaneous contamination of the NIR-DCS BFI signal during studies where skin blood flow may be elevated but skeletal muscle perfusion is of specific interest.

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