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1 Departments of Kinesiology Anatomy and Physiology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas 66506-5602; and 2 Department of Bioengineering, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093
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ABSTRACT |
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Intravital microscopy facilitates insights into muscle microcirculatory structural and functional control, provided that surgical exteriorization does not impact vascular function. We utilized a novel combination of phosphorescence quenching, microvascular oxygen pressure (microvascular PO2), and microsphere (blood flow) techniques to evaluate static and dynamic behavior within the exposed intact (I) and exteriorized (EX) rat spinotrapezius muscle. I and EX muscles were studied under control, metabolic blockade with 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP), and electrically stimulated conditions with 1-Hz contractions, and across switches from 21 to 100% and 10% inspired O2. Surgical preparation did not alter spinotrapezius muscle blood flow in either I or EX muscle. DNP elevated muscle blood flow ~120% (P < 0.05) in both I and EX muscles (P > 0.05 between I and EX). Contractions reduced microvascular PO2 from 30.4 ± 4.3 to 21.8 ± 4.8 mmHg in I muscle and from 33.2 ± 3.0 to 25.9 ± 2.8 mmHg in EX muscles with no difference between I and EX. In each O2 condition, there was no difference (each P > 0.05) in microvascular PO2 between I and EX muscles (21% O2: I = 37 ± 1; EX = 36 ± 1; 100%: I = 62 ± 5; EX = 51 ± 9; 10%: I = 20 ± 1; EX = 17 ± 2 mmHg). Similarly, the dynamic behavior of microvascular PO2 to altered inspired O2 was unaffected by the EX procedure [half-time (t1/2) to 100% O2: I = 23 ± 5; EX = 23 ± 4; t1/2 to 10%: I = 14 ± 2; EX = 16 ± 2 s, both P > 0.05]. These results demonstrate that the spinotrapezius muscle can be EX without significant alteration of microvascular integrity and responsiveness under the conditions assessed.
hypoxia; hyperoxia; metabolic blockade; muscle contractions; phosphorescence quenching; intravital microscopy
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INTRODUCTION |
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THE VIABILITY OF SKELETAL MUSCLE depends on the presence of a functional microvascular bed that provides adequate supply of oxygen and nutrients to, and removal of waste products from, the tissue. Important insights into muscle microcirculatory function in health and disease have been achieved with the use of intravital microscopy techniques that necessitate surgical exteriorization of the muscle. In this regard, the rat spinotrapezius preparation first described by Gray in 1973 (9) represents one principal model in which to evaluate physiological and pathophysiological phenomena within the microcirculation. For example, the rat spinotrapezius has been pivotal in our understanding of the effects of muscle structure-function relationships and smooth muscle physiology (16, 19, 33) and the role of nitric oxide and calcium in the microcirculation in health (24, 41). In addition, the spinotrapezius muscle preparation has provided insights into the pathophysiological microcirculatory consequences of chronic diseases such as type-1 diabetes (14, 35), hypertension (30), and chronic heart failure (6, 15). The tacit assumption in all of those studies has been that surgical intervention does not impact microcirculatory function either under control conditions or in response to experimental or pathological stimuli. However, it has been demonstrated that arterial and arteriolar pressures are reduced in the cremaster muscle after an exteriorization procedure that interrupts the distal blood supply emanating from the deferential artery (5).
To evaluate the effect of muscle exteriorization on the functional integrity of the microcirculation, the experimental methodology employed must be suitable for evaluation of not only blood flow (O2 delivery) but also the balance between O2 delivery and utilization in both the intact and exteriorized preparations. Moreover, in addition to steady-state conditions, the dynamic response of the microcirculation should be evaluated. Consequently, a novel combination of phosphorescence quenching and microsphere techniques was utilized across a range of different experimental conditions, i.e., metabolic stimulation with 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP), electrically stimulated muscle contractions, and inspired hypoxia and hyperoxia, designed to evaluate the effect of surgical intervention on integrated static and dynamic microcirculatory behaviors within the rat spinotrapezius muscle.
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METHODS |
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Animals. We used 4- to 5-mo-old female Sprague-Dawley rats (n = 33, 215-265 g) in these investigations. At this body mass, the spinotrapezius muscle has minimal overlying fascia and thus maintains optimal optical clarity for intravital microscopy.
Spinotrapezius model. The rat spinotrapezius muscle lies in the mid-dorsal region, where it originates in the lower thoracic and upper lumbar region and inserts onto the spine of the scapula. The muscle was prepared surgically with the rat under pentobarbital sodium anesthesia (40 mg/kg ip) with the use of previously described methods (9, 33). Exteriorization was always performed on the left (L) muscle. Although removal of the fascia does improve visibility of the fibers and microcirculation, it causes separation of the fibers and dilatation of microvessels (22, 27). Therefore, exteriorization was performed with minimal fascial disturbance designed to minimize tissue damage (i.e., with the exception of the distal feed artery, all of the vascular and nervous connections remained intact) and alterations of myocyte-to-vessel orientation (22) as well as any associated microcirculatory consequences (9, 27). Briefly, the rat was positioned on a circulation-heated (38°C) Lucite platform, and the spinotrapezius muscle was superfused continuously with the use of a microcirculator (model U3-7A, Julabo, Schwarzwald, Germany) with a Krebs-Henseleit bicarbonate-buffered solution equilibrated with 95% N2-5% CO2 (42). The exposed dorsal surface of the spinotrapezius muscle was protected with Saran Wrap (Dow Chemical, Indianapolis, IN), whereas the muscle was sutured with 6.0 silk at five equidistant positions around the caudal periphery to a thin wire horseshoe manifold (40). Thereafter, all exposed surfaces were either covered with Saran Wrap or bathed in the Krebs-Henseleit solution to ~1 mm in depth. The manifold was attached with a swivel to a muscle-stretching apparatus that permitted precise, systematic, and uniform length changes of the entire spinotrapezius muscle along its principal fiber longitudinal axis. This facilitates setting muscle sarcomere length at 2.7 µm, the approximate resting length, thus controlling for length-induced blood flow alterations (33).
To verify that the preparation was not contaminated by atmospheric O2 diffusing through the fluid and Saran Wrap barriers, the microvascular PO2 was monitored after the rat was euthanized (0.3 ml, 1 M KCl ia). In each instance, PO2 fell rapidly to <1 mmHg, indicative of negligible diffusion of atmospheric O2 into the muscle. In those preparations where mean arterial pressure (MAP) fell <90 mmHg or there was bleeding visible in the vicinity of the spinotrapezius muscle, i.e., from damage to a feed vessel, the preparation was discarded (~30%). For the intact preparation, the surface of the contralateral, or right (R), muscle was exposed with a ~2.5-cm incision that facilitated superfusion, electrical stimulation, and measurement of microvascular PO2.Experimental design and conditions. The rats were assigned at random to one of four groups to determine the effects of surgical exteriorization on the spinotrapezius. Group 1 consisted of blood flow measurements under control conditions. In these studies, blood flow was measured in the anesthetized animal, and the L spinotrapezius muscle was then exteriorized and the R muscle exposed before a second blood flow measurement (n = 4) was made. In group 2, the blood flow response to increased metabolic activity induced by metabolic blockade was measured. Blood flow was measured after exposure in the intact R muscle and exteriorization in the L muscle, and both muscles were then superfused with 30 mM DNP before the second blood flow measurement (n = 6). Group 3 determined the response of microvascular PO2 to electrical stimulation-induced muscle contractions (see Electrical stimulation). Intact and exteriorized muscles were stimulated in random order, and microvascular PO2 was measured at rest and after 2-3 min stimulation when the microvascular PO2 had stabilized (n = 6). In group 4, the dynamic response of microvascular PO2 to hyperoxic (100%) and hypoxic (10%) switches of inspired O2 was measured. Measurements of microvascular PO2 were made in intact and exteriorized muscles in random order across the transitions to altered inspired O2 (n = 7). During each of the experimental conditions, MAP was monitored via the carotid artery (model 200, DigiMed BPA, Louisville, KY).
Blood flow.
Tissue blood flows were determined with the use of the
radionucleotide-tagged microsphere technique that has been adapted for
use in the exercising rat as described originally by Armstrong and
Laughlin (1) and modified for use in our laboratories
(29). Briefly, polyethylene catheters (PE-10 connected to
PE-50) were placed into the right carotid artery and caudal artery. The
right carotid artery catheter was advanced toward the heart and secured in a position just inside the aortic arch. This was accomplished by
advancing the catheter toward the left ventricle while the arterial
pressure waveform was being monitored. When the catheter reached the
aortic valve, the pressure waveform became distorted. The catheter was
retracted ~2-3 mm and secured in place. The caudal artery
catheter was advanced toward the bifurcation of the descending aorta
and secured in place. The right carotid catheter was connected to a
pressure transducer, and the caudal artery catheter was connected to a
1-ml syringe placed in a withdrawal pump (model 907, Harvard Apparatus,
South Natick, MA). Blood withdrawal from the tail artery catheter
(microspheres reference sample) was initiated at a rate of 0.25 ml/min.
At the same time, arterial blood pressure and heart rate (HR) were
recorded from the carotid artery catheter. After 30 s of blood
withdrawal, the carotid artery catheter was disconnected from the
pressure transducer, and ~250,000 radioactive microspheres were
slowly infused into the aortic arch. The microspheres (46Sc, 85Sr, and 113Sn) used in the
present study were 15 ± 3 µm in diameter as specified by the
manufacturer (NEN Research Products, DuPont, Boston, MA). These
isotopes were infused in random order under the different experimental
conditions in which blood flows were measured (i.e., presurgery,
postexteriorization, and post-DNP superfusion). The microspheres were
suspended in normal saline containing 0.01% Tween 80 with a specific
activity ranging from 7 to 15 mCi/g. Before each infusion, the
microspheres were thoroughly mixed and agitated by sonication to
prevent clumping. The microspheres were injected into the ascending
aorta in a volume of ~0.10 ml over 5-10 s. Blood withdrawal from
the caudal artery catheter was maintained for 30 s after the
microsphere injection to ensure that all microspheres had been cleared
from the withdrawal catheter. The radioactivity of the tissues was
determined on a Cobra II Auto-Gamma Spectrometer (Packard Instruments,
Downers Grove, IL) set to record the peak energy activity of each
isotope for 2 min. The radioactivity of the tissues was then analyzed
by computer, taking into account the cross-talk fraction between the
different isotopes. Blood flow (expressed as
ml · min
1 · 100 g
1 of
tissue) to the whole right and left spinotrapezius muscles, solei, and
kidneys was calculated by the reference sample method as described by
Ishise et al. (13). Adequate mixing of the microspheres was verified for each injection by demonstrating <15% difference in
blood flows to the right and left kidneys and/or solei.
Phosphorescence quenching theory.
The oxygen dependence of phosphorescence is described by the
Stern-Volmer equation (37)
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1 · s
1. At 38°C and pH 7.4, kQ = 409 mmHg
1 · s
1 and
to = 601 µs (26).
Measurement.
Initially, 15 mg/kg of the phosphorescent probe
palladium-mesotetra(4-carboxyphenyl) porphyrin dendrimer (R2) was
infused via arterial cannula. Oxyphor R2 binds tightly to albumin.
Specifically, Lo et al. (25) have demonstrated that R2 is
essentially completely bound to albumin in solution at a concentration
of 0.5% albumin. The concentration of albumin in rat serum is >3 g/dl
(i.e., >6-fold that is necessary for complete binding; see Ref. 36).
In addition, R2 at a pH of 7.4 possesses a net-negative charge of
approximately
14 mV. Both of these properties help to restrict R2 to
the intravascular compartment. Microvascular
PO2 was determined by using a PMOD 1000 Frequency Domain Phosphorimeter (Oxygen Enterprises, Philadelphia, PA)
with the common end of the bifurcated light guide placed ~2-4 mm
above the medial region of the spinotrapezius (i.e., superficial to
dorsal surface). This location on the spinotrapezius muscle is the same
as that used during intravital microscopy and is ~8-10 mm from
the distal (detached) proximity. The excitation light (524 nm) is
focused on an ~2-mm diameter circle of exposed or exteriorized muscle
surface and samples blood within the microvasculature up to 500 µm
deep. The value of microvascular PO2
principally reflects capillary blood, because this compartment
constitutes the majority of intramuscular blood volume
(34). The phosphorescence signal (700 nm) was averaged for
a 200-ms interval for each microvascular PO2
measurement, and the measurements were repeated at 2-s intervals.
Electrical stimulation. Stainless steel plate electrodes (2.5-mm diameter) were attached to the muscle proximal to the motor point (cathode) and across the caudal end (anode) close to the spinal attachment to elicit indirect bipolar muscle contractions (31). The muscle was stimulated to contract at 1 Hz for 3 min (5-8 V, 250-µs pulse duration) with the use of a stimulator (model S88, Grass Instruments, Quincy, MA). This stimulation protocol has been demonstrated to increase blood flow two- to threefold within the spinotrapezius muscle (Behnke, Kindig, Musch, and Poole; unpublished results).
Statistical analyses.
Data are presented as means ± SE. The differences pre- and
postsurgery and between intact and exteriorized muscles under each experimental condition were evaluated with the use of a two-way ANOVA
with repeated measures design and paired t-tests as
appropriate. Statistical significance was accepted at the
P
0.05 level.
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RESULTS |
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Groups 1 and 2: Surgical exteriorization and DNP effects on blood
flow.
Surgical preparation did not alter whole muscle blood flow
significantly within either the exteriorized or intact muscles (Fig.
1). Metabolic stimulation with DNP
superfusion elevated muscle blood flow over twofold in the intact
(19 ± 7 to 42 ± 14 ml · min
1 · 100 g
1,
P < 0.05) and exteriorized (16 ± 4 to 35 ± 9 ml · min
1 · 100 g
1,
P < 0.05) muscles. The magnitude of this increase was
not different between intact and exteriorized muscles (Fig.
2).
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Group 3: Effects of electrically stimulated muscle contractions on
microvascular PO2.
Muscle contractions reduced microvascular PO2
from 30.4 ± 4.3 to 21.8 ± 4.8 mmHg in intact and from
33.2 ± 3.0 to 25.9 ± 2.8 mmHg in exteriorized muscles (Fig.
3). Both conditions showed no difference
in microvascular PO2 between intact and
exteriorized muscles.
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Group 4: Effects of hypoxic and hyperoxic switches on microvascular
PO2.
As expected, arterial PO2 was significantly
reduced from 80 ± 3 mmHg breathing room air to 48 ± 5 mmHg
on the hypoxic (10% O2) inspirate. Inspired hyperoxia
(100% O2) elevated arterial PO2 to
307 ± 57 mmHg. Compared with MAP in normoxia (108 ± 4 mmHg), hypoxia significantly lowered MAP to 96 ± 4 mmHg
(P < 0.05), whereas it was unchanged in hyperoxia
(110 ± 5 mmHg). Figure 4
demonstrates the magnitude and time course of the microvascular
PO2 changes in response to switches among these
inspired O2 percentages in one exteriorized muscle. As seen
in Table 1, neither the magnitude nor the
half-time dynamics of the microvascular PO2
response after each switch were altered significantly in exteriorized
compared with intact muscles.
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DISCUSSION |
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The principal methods for assessing the viability of an exteriorized muscle for microcirculatory investigation include the appearance of vigorous arteriolar flow and arteriolar vasodilation or vasoconstriction during chemical (e.g., adenosine, epinephrine) or oxygen (hypoxic, hyperoxic) challenge. Such assessment may be subjective and is almost never quantitative. Moreover, the inability to observe anything but superficial microcirculatory flow (reflectance microscopy) in the nonexteriorized preparation complicates direct observation of arteriolar vasoaction in intact muscle and thus comparison between intact and exteriorized preparations is not feasible. Thus the present investigation utilized methods and conditions suitable for assessing integrated microcirculatory function in both intact and exteriorized preparations. In no instance was there any indication of a systematic alteration in the basal blood flow (whole muscle) or microvascular PO2 or the magnitude and/or kinetic response of these variables to metabolic stimulation and change of muscle influent PO2 postsurgery. The present investigation therefore provides no evidence that the surgical manipulations requisite for exteriorizing the spinotrapezius before intravital transmission microscopy systematically impair microvascular integrity or responses across the range of conditions evaluated herein.
Surgical exteriorization.
Skeletal muscle oxygen consumption (
O2)
increases up to two orders of magnitude from rest to maximal exercise
(7, 20, 21, 32). This extraordinary increase necessitates
a substantial elevation of muscle O2-diffusing capacity in
concert with elevated convective O2 delivery. Theoretical
models of O2 transport and diffusion within muscle consider
that one major determinant of muscle O2-diffusing capacity
is the number of red blood cells (RBC) found along the surface of a
myocyte at a given time (8, 10). Thus at first it seems
reasonable that at exercise onset more capillaries are recruited and
the hematocrit within each capillary is elevated (17),
thereby increasing RBC number along the fiber surface. However, it is
now evident that, at least in some muscles, the majority of capillaries
may be "recruited" at rest (4, 12, 15, 33, 42), which
limits the opportunity for additional capillary recruitment during
exercise. Thus the increased muscle O2-diffusing capacity
from rest to exercise cannot rely greatly on the recruitment of
additional capillaries or capillary units per se. Rather, it is likely
determined by factors related to augmentation of RBC flow within
previously RBC-perfused capillaries (2) or intracellular
events (11). The present investigation demonstrates that
surgical exteriorization does not elevate muscle blood flow nor alter
microvascular PO2 at rest. These findings support the notion that the high percentage of capillaries supporting RBC flow reported in the spinotrapezius preparation (12, 14, 16,
33) is not an artifact secondary to elevated blood flow resulting from muscle manipulation or damage.
Metabolic stimulation by DNP.
Muscle metabolic stimulation by DNP infusion elevates muscle
O2 approximately threefold
(3), and DNP superfusion of the exteriorized hamster
cremaster muscle increases arteriolar diameter and RBC velocity
(39). There is evidence that this occurs via venular-arteriolar diffusion of vasoactive metabolites
(38) rather than by a direct DNP-induced relaxation of
arteriolar smooth muscle (3). In the present
investigation, blood flow increased to 2.2-fold resting levels in both
intact and exteriorized muscles, demonstrating that the net effect of
DNP on the control of muscle blood flow was unaltered by surgical exteriorization.
Electrically stimulated muscle contractions.
Oxygen delivery (
O2) to contracting
myocytes is elevated by augmenting muscle blood flow and fractional
O2 extraction. The precise regulators of the increased
muscle blood flow are likely contingent on multiple factors such as the
intensity, frequency, and duration of the contractions as well as the
type of muscle (architecture, fiber type composition, oxidative
capacity) and presiding experimental conditions. Given this, arterial
driving pressure, muscle pump activity, endothelial cell shear stress, buildup of vasoactive metabolites, and reduced intramuscular
PO2 are each thought to play a role in
augmenting muscle blood flow during exercise. In addition, fractional
O2 extraction increases as a hyperbolic function of muscle
O2 (32). During exercise, blood flow (and
O2) and O2
extraction are regulated tightly such that
O2 delivery increases in proportion
to muscle
O2. The measurements
of microvascular PO2 made in the present
investigation assess the
O2-to-
O2
relation at rest and during exercise. Thus, whereas neither
O2 nor
O2
themselves were measured, the finding of an unchanged microvascular
PO2 between intact and exteriorized muscles at
rest and the magnitude of the fall during contractions is indicative
that, irrespective of the exact control mechanisms, the matching of
O2 to
O2
was not altered by surgical exteriorization.
Hypoxic and hyperoxic switches.
Altered local PO2 exerts a profound
vasodilatory (hypoxia) or vasoconstrictory (hyperoxia) response
(4, 23, 28). Because acute changes in inspired
O2 do not appear to alter pulmonary or tissue
O2 appreciably at rest or during
submaximal exercise (17), any subsequent alteration of
microvascular PO2 will depend on the effect of
the inspired O2 on arterial PO2
(and O2 content), MAP, and muscle vascular conductance,
i.e., arteriolar smooth muscle tone (either modulated locally or
neurally in response to central effects of hypo- or hyperoxia). Neither
arterial PO2 nor MAP was significantly
different between intact and exteriorized preparations (same rats,
order randomized). Hence the similarity of microvascular
PO2, with respect to the magnitude of the
absolute change and dynamic profile of microvascular
PO2 across each switch, demonstrate that
O2-mediated arteriolar vasoaction was unaltered by surgical exteriorization.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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The authors thank K. Sue Hageman, Emily R. Diederich, Kelly Brown, and Holly K. Brown for technical assistance. Dr. David F. Wilson provided invaluable expertise with the phosphorescence-quenching technique. We also thank Prof. Olga Hudlicka for the discussion regarding the potential impact of severing the distal blood supply on the peak muscle blood flow in the spinotrapezius.
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FOOTNOTES |
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This work was supported in part by National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Grant HLBI-50306 and Training Grant 5-37941.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: D. C. Poole, Dept. Anatomy and Physiology, Veterinary Medical Sciences, Kansas State Univ., Manhattan, KS 66506-5602 (E-mail: poole{at}vet.ksu.edu).
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Received 13 April 2000; accepted in final form 11 July 2000.
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