Abstract

Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is characterized by stenosis and occlusion of the lower limb arteries. Although leg blood flow is limited in PAD, it remains unclear whether skeletal muscle microvascular perfusion is affected. We compared whole leg blood flow and calf muscle microvascular perfusion after cuff occlusion and submaximal leg exercise between patients with PAD ( n = 12, 69 ± 9 yr) and healthy age-matched control participants ( n = 12, 68 ± 7 yr). Microvascular blood flow (microvascular volume × flow velocity) of the medial gastrocnemius muscle was measured before and immediately after the following: 1) 5 min of thigh-cuff occlusion, and 2) a 5-min bout of intermittent isometric plantar-flexion exercise (400 N) using real-time contrast-enhanced ultrasound. Whole leg blood flow was measured after thigh-cuff occlusion and during submaximal plantar-flexion exercise using strain-gauge plethysmography. Postocclusion whole leg blood flow and calf muscle microvascular perfusion were lower in patients with PAD than control participants, and these parameters were strongly correlated ( r = 0.84, P < 0.01). During submaximal exercise, total whole leg blood flow and vascular conductance were not different between groups. There were also no group differences in postexercise calf muscle microvascular perfusion, although microvascular blood volume was higher in patients with PAD than control participants (12.41 ± 6.98 vs. 6.34 ± 4.98 arbitrary units, P = 0.03). This study demonstrates that the impaired muscle perfusion of patients with PAD during postocclusion hyperemia is strongly correlated with disease severity and is likely mainly determined by the limited conduit artery flow. In response to submaximal leg exercise, microvascular flow volume was elevated in patients with PAD, which may reflect a compensatory mechanism to maintain muscle perfusion and oxygen delivery during recovery from exercise. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study suggests that peripheral arterial disease (PAD) has different effects on the microvascular perfusion responses to cuff occlusion and submaximal leg exercise. Patients with PAD have impaired microvascular perfusion after cuff occlusion, similar to that previously reported after maximal exercise. In response to submaximal exercise, however, the microvascular flow volume response was elevated in patients with PAD compared with control. This finding may reflect a compensatory mechanism to maintain perfusion and oxygen delivery during recovery from exercise.

Highlights

  • Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is an atherosclerotic disease characterized by stenosis or occlusion of the conduit arteries of the lower limbs

  • Postexercise muscle microvascular perfusion responses compared with control participants, but muscle microvascular perfusion was achieved through a greater increase in microvascular volume in patients with PAD

  • We found that calf muscle microvascular perfusion after 5 min of cuff occlusion was impaired in patients with PAD

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Summary

Introduction

Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is an atherosclerotic disease characterized by stenosis or occlusion of the conduit arteries of the lower limbs. Patients with PAD have impaired endothelial function [4] and alterations in their skeletal muscle phenotype that likely contribute to their exercise intolerance [2, 25]. There are, some contrasting reports that muscle capillarization is similar [10] or even greater in patients with PAD [20] than controls. It is unclear what effect PAD has on microvascular structure and function and, in particular, what role microvascular dysfunction plays in the exercise intolerance of patients with PAD

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