Abstract
Local heat can accelerate the blood circulation and induce the vasodilatation. Investigators reported that local heat causes an increase in skin blood flow consisting of two phases. The first is solely sensory neural, and the second is nitric oxide mediated. However, the mechanism underlying the skin blood flow response to local heating are complex and poorly understood. The mechanisms behind these two phases are deduced to be linked by flow-mediated dilation. In this study, the variation of the blood flow and the blood vessel diameter are monitored during local heating. According to the dynamic blood flow, the theoretical model of flow mediated dilation involving the key agents production and transportation was first used to study vasodilatation process during heating, and the variations of blood vessel was obtained. Finally, accurate distributions of the nitric oxide, calcium and myosin concentrations in the arterial wall were found during autoregulation. We evaluated the time course of the blood vessel changing and verified the fact that the second increase in blood flow is the result of flow dilation mediation. The effects of dilation of blood vessel were also analyzed.
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have