Abstract

Our goals were to determine the nature of endothelium-dependent and -independent vascular responses in isolated soleus feed arteries (SFA) and to test the hypothesis that these responses would be altered by exercise training. Exercise-trained rats ran 30 m/min, up a 15% grade, 1 h/day, 5 days/wk for 10-12 wk, while sedentary control rats were confined to normal cage activity. SFA were isolated, cannulated, and pressurized at 90 cmH2O. After a 1-h equilibration period, the dose-response relationships to constrictors, endothelium-dependent dilators, and endothelium-independent dilators were examined. SFA developed spontaneous tone, demonstrated myogenic reactivity by maintaining vessel diameter in the face of large changes in intraluminal pressure, and constricted in a dose-dependent manner to norepinephrine and potassium chloride. SFA dilated in a dose-dependent manner to the endothelium-dependent dilators acetylcholine and increased flow and to the endothelium-independent dilator sodium nitroprusside. SFA did not dilate to the putative endothelium-dependent dilators bradykinin, substance P, and clonidine or to adenosine. Dilation to acetylcholine was attenuated markedly by arginine analogs and less by 20 mM KCl, but it was unaltered by indomethacin. These results indicate that SFA respond to a number of vasoactive substances, consistent with the hypothesis that SFA participate in the control of vascular resistance. However, exercise training does not appear to elicit a stimulus adequate to alter vasomotor responses in SFA.

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