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    J Physiol. 2004 Dec 1;561(Pt 2):535-45. Epub 2004 Sep 23.

    Arteriolar network architecture and vasomotor function with ageing in mouse gluteus maximus muscle.

    Source

    The John B. Pierce Laboratory, Yale University School of Medicine, 290 Congress Ave, New Haven, CT 06519, USA.

    Abstract

    Physical diminishes with ageing, but little is known of how the microvascular supply to skeletal muscle fibres is affected. To test the hypothesis that ageing alters blood flow control, we investigated network architecture and vasomotor responses of arterioles in the gluteus maximus muscle of young (2-3 months), adult (12-14 months) and old (18-20 months) C57BL6 male mice (n = 83) (Young, Adult and Old, respectively). Microvascular casts revealed that the total number, length and surface area of arteriolar segments (diameter, 10-50 microm) were not significantly different across age-groups. However, for arterioles with diameter of 30 microm, tortuosity and branch angles increased with age (P < 0.05). In anaesthetized mice, second-order (2A) distributing arterioles had similar resting (17 +/- 1 microm) and maximal (37 +/- 1 microm) diameters and similar responsiveness to cumulative (10(-10)-10(-4) M) superfusion of acetylcholine or phenylephrine. With superfusate oxygen level raised from 0 to 21%, 2A arteriolar constriction in Young (11 +/- 1 microm) was greater (P < 0.05) than Adult and Old (5 +/- 1 microm). Observed 1 mm upstream from microiontophoresis of ACh (1 microA, 1 s), conducted vasodilatation was 10 +/- 1 microm in Young, 17 +/- 1 microm in Adult and 6 +/- 1 microm in Old (P < 0.05). With muscle contractions (2, 4 and 8 Hz; 30 s) arteriolar diameter increased similarly across age-groups (6 +/- 1, 11 +/- 1 and 18 +/- 1 microm, respectively). Muscle mass and active tension were similar across age-groups yet postcontraction vasodilatation recovered more rapidly in Old versus Adult and Young (P < 0.05). With arteriolar network architecture maintained during ageing, the impairment in conducted vasodilatation and attenuation of postcontraction vasodilatation may compromise exercise tolerance.

    PMID:
    15388783
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    PMCID:
    PMC1665363
    Free PMC Article

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