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Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 291: H1797-H1802, 2006. First published April 28, 2006; doi:10.1152/ajpheart.01113.2005
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Acute vascular responses to isometric handgrip exercise and effects of training in persons medicated for hypertension

Cheri L. McGowan,1 Andrew S. Levy,1 Philip J. Millar,1 Juan C. Guzman,2 Carlos A. Morillo,2 Neil McCartney,1 and Maureen J. MacDonald1

Departments of 1Kinesiology and 2Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Submitted 20 October 2005 ; accepted in final form 17 April 2006

Previous work from our laboratory demonstrated that isometric handgrip (IHG) training improved local, endothelium-dependent vasodilation in medicated hypertensives [McGowan CL (PhD Thesis), 2006; McGowan et al. Physiologist 47: 285, 2004]. We investigated whether changes in the capacity of smooth muscle to dilate (regardless of endothelial factors) influenced this training-induced change, and we examined the acute vascular responses to a single bout of IHG. Seventeen subjects performed four 2-min unilateral IHG contractions at 30% of maximal voluntary effort, three times a week for 8 wk. Pre- and posttraining, brachial artery flow-mediated dilation (FMD, an index of endothelium-dependent vasodilation) and nitroglycerin-mediated maximal vasodilation (an index of endothelium-independent vasodilation) were measured in the exercised arm by using ultrasound before and immediately after acute IHG exercise. IHG training resulted in improved resting brachial FMD (P < 0.01) and no change in nitroglycerin-mediated maximal vasodilation. Pre- and posttraining, brachial artery FMD decreased following an acute bout of IHG exercise (normalized to peak shear rate, pre-, before IHG exercise: 0.01 ± 0.002, after IHG exercise: 0.008 ± 0.002%/s–1; post-, before IHG exercise: 0.020 ± 0.003, after IHG exercise: 0.010 ± 0.003%/s–1; P < 0.01). Posttraining, resting brachial artery FMD improved yet nitroglycerin-mediated maximal vasodilation was unchanged in persons medicated for hypertension. This suggests that the training-induced improvements in the resting brachial artery FMD were not due to underlying changes in the forearm vasculature. Acute IHG exercise attenuated brachial artery FMD, and although this impairment may be interpreted as hazardous to medicated hypertensives with already dysfunctional endothelium, the effects appear transient as repeated exposure to the IHG stimulus improved resting endothelium-dependent vasodilation.

acute exercise; isometric training; flow-mediated dilation; blood flow



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: M. J. MacDonald, Dept. of Kinesiology, McMaster Univ., 1280 Main St., West, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, L8S 4K1 (e-mail: macdonmj{at}mcmaster.ca)




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