Abstract

The relationships between smooth muscle calcium and isometric tension generation to spontaneous lymphatic pump activity and its modulation by stretch equivalent from 0 to approximately 6 cmH2O were investigated. Excised preparations of the rat thoracic duct were mounted on a wire myograph and loaded with the calcium-sensitive fluorochrome indo-1. Calcium-dependent fluorescence and isometric force were simultaneously recorded. The thoracic duct segments developed spontaneous rhythmic contractile activity. Each contraction was preceded by an increase in intracellular calcium. When the vessels were normalized and stabilized at a preload equal to 3 cmH2O, the peak generation in tension occurred 0.70 +/- 0.11 s after that of calcium. Incremental stretch enhanced the frequency of the phasic activity and amplitude of isometric force generation but not the basal calcium level or the amplitude of the calcium transient. These findings suggest that stretch enhances lymphatic pump activity by increasing the pacemaker activity and the calcium sensitivity of the contractile apparatus.

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