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Sex differences in leg vasodilation during graded knee extensor exercise in young adults
Author(s) -
Beth A. Parker,
Sandra L. Smithmyer,
Justin Pelberg,
Aaron Mishkin,
Michael D. Herr,
David N. Proctor
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
journal of applied physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.253
H-Index - 229
eISSN - 8750-7587
pISSN - 1522-1601
DOI - 10.1152/japplphysiol.00662.2007
Subject(s) - medicine , femoral artery , vasodilation , cardiology , supine position , hemodynamics , blood pressure , heart rate , blood flow , reactive hyperemia
Limb vascular conductance responses to pharmacological and nonexercise vasodilator stimuli are generally augmented in women compared with men. In the present investigation, we tested the hypothesis that exercise-induced vasodilator responses are also greater in women than men. Sixteen women and 15 men (20-30 yr) with similar fitness and activity levels performed graded quadriceps exercise (supine, single-leg knee extensions, 40 contractions/min) to maximal exertion. Active limb hemodynamics (left common femoral artery diameter and volumetric blood flow), heart rate (ECG), and beat-to-beat mean arterial blood pressure (MAP; radial artery tonometry) were measured during each 3-min workload (4.8 and 8 W/stage for women and men, respectively). The hyperemic response to exercise (slope of femoral blood flow vs. workload) was greater (P < 0.01) in women as was femoral blood flow at workloads >15 W. The leg vasodilatory response to exercise (slope of calculated femoral vascular conductance vs. absolute workload) was also greater in women than in men (P < 0.01) because of the sex difference in hyperemia and the women's lower MAP ( approximately 10-15 mmHg) at all workloads (P < 0.05). The femoral artery dilated to a significantly greater extent in the women ( approximately 0.5 mm) than in the men ( approximately 0.1 mm) across all submaximal workloads. At maximal exertion, femoral vascular conductance was lower in the men (men, 18.0 +/- 0.6 ml.min(-1)xmmHg(-1); women, 22.6 +/- 1.4 mlxmin(-1)xmmHg(-1); P < 0.01). Collectively, these findings suggest that the vasodilatory response to dynamic leg exercise is greater in young women vs. men.

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