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Fluctuations in blood flow to acral skin in humans: connection with heart rate and blood pressure variability.
Author(s) -
Lossius K,
Eriksen M,
Walløe L
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
the journal of physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.802
H-Index - 240
eISSN - 1469-7793
pISSN - 0022-3751
DOI - 10.1113/jphysiol.1993.sp019491
Subject(s) - blood pressure , blood flow , cardiology , heart rate , connection (principal bundle) , medicine , mathematics , geometry
1. Spontaneous fluctuations in blood flow in arteries supplying acral skin were investigated with Doppler ultrasound in human subjects. Finger blood pressure, heart rate (HR) and cardiac output were measured simultaneously and noninvasively. 2. Synchronous fluctuations in flow were found in arteries supplying the hands and feet. The fluctuations were larger and more rapid than the flow variations which have been demonstrated with other methods. The magnitude of the total flow fluctuations in the hands and feet was estimated to be 5‐10% of cardiac output in resting subjects. This range of flow fluctuations is made possible by spontaneous opening and closing of skin arteriovenous anastomoses (AVAs). 3. The fluctuations in skin blood flow were accompanied by inverse fluctuations in mean blood pressure (MAP). The power spectra of skin vascular conductance and MAP both contained maximum intensity at low frequencies, below 0.15 Hz, with high coherence. 4. The central circulatory events connected with the skin blood flow fluctuations were calculated from the experimental data with the use of transfer function analysis. There was a rise in HR, cardiac output and MAP starting 1‐4 s before a cutaneous vasoconstriction. This indicates that the HR and MAP responses are not only passive effects of changes in peripheral resistance, but are the result of a simultaneous activation of the peripheral vascular and cardiac efferent branches of the autonomic nervous system. The HR and MAP responses are then modified, probably by baroreceptor activation.

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