Regular physical exercise improves walking performance in patients affected with peripheral obliterative arterial disease (POAD). The mechanisms underlying the phenomenon are still controversial. In order to verify the hypothesis that physical conditioning of lower limbs on a treadmill and ischemic preconditioning of the heart could share some biological aspects, 14 POAD subjects underwent a training program on the treadmill consisting of five repeated submaximal exercises at five-minute and two-hour intervals preceding the maximal tolerance test. Moreover, a protocol with two daily submaximal walking exercises over one week was also performed. Pain-free and total walking distance were measured before and after they performed the program. Moreover, plasma levels of adenosine and adenosine triphosphate (ATP) were measured and polymorphonuclear (PMN) leukocyte activity was studied together with rheologic parameters. Pain-free distance was prolonged by 15.4% and 14.3%, and total distance was prolonged by 23.1% and 26.9%, in the exercises with five-minute and two-hour intervals, respectively. After one week of daily exercises, the onset of pain and the end of the test were delayed by 24% and 43.7%, respectively. An improvement in blood rheology and a reduced PMN reactivity were also observed with the three protocols, associated with an increase in plasma levels of adenosine and ATP. Similarly to ischemic preconditioning in the heart, the possibility is suggested that an adenosine-mediated mechanism may contribute to the development of physical conditioning in treadmill-trained POAD patients.
1. Following local vasoconstriction-inducing stimuli, such as the cold pressor test (CPT), significant changes occur in haemodynamics, with a rise in arterial blood pressure and heart rate (HR) due to the activation of the sympathetic nervous system. Among the compensatory mechanisms to local ischaemia, the endogenous nucleoside adenosine (ADO) has been suggested to play a relevant role by contributing to sympathetic stimulation. The possibility was investigated that CPT-induced increases in plasma ADO levels were not only an expression of the increased production of ADO in the ischaemic area, but also a consequence of systemic sympathoexcitatory mechanisms, thus showing a bidirectional involvement of the mechanisms of ADO formation. 2. The CPT was performed in 15 volunteers and mean arterial blood pressure (MABP) and HR were evaluated, together with plasma levels of noradrenaline (NA) and ADO in the tested and contralateral arm. The 15 subjects were then divided into three groups of five that were treated with either 5 mg transdermal clonidine weekly, 100 mg atenolol daily or 600 mg aminophylline twice daily. After 1 week treatment, the same test was repeated in the respective groups. 3. The CPT induced a rise in MABP and HR and an increase in plasma levels of NA and ADO. Increases in ADO were more pronounced in the tested arm. Clonidine blunted the haemodynamic response and NA release, while increases in ADO increase were reduced to a greater extent in the contralateral arm rather than the tested arm. Atenolol only affected MABP and HR without any effect on NA and ADO levels. Theophylline did not show any effect on CPT-induced changes. 4. In conclusion, local vasoconstriction and ischaemia induced in one arm following CPT are associated with haemodynamic changes dependent on the activation of the sympathetic system. The observed increase in plasma levels of ADO seems to be, in part, a direct expression of local responses to ischaemia (pre-dominant in the tested arm), but also appears as the consequence of systemic sympathoexcitatory mechanisms. Such increases in ADO are not dependent on a beta 1-adrenoceptor-mediated mechanism. Finally, theophylline, at a therapeutic dose, has no effect on the response to CPT.
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