2004
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.01390.2003
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MRI measures of perfusion-related changes in human skeletal muscle during progressive contractions

Abstract: Although skeletal muscle perfusion is fundamental to proper muscle function, in vivo measurements are typically limited to those of limb or arterial blood flow, rather than flow within the muscle bed itself. We present a noninvasive functional MRI (fMRI) technique for measuring perfusion-related signal intensity (SI) changes in human skeletal muscle during and after contractions and demonstrate its application to the question of occlusion during a range of contraction intensities. Eight healthy men (aged 20-31… Show more

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Cited by 86 publications
(107 citation statements)
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“…Nevertheless, the similarity of NIRS-derived oxygen saturation at 60 and 100% MVC during exercise (Fig. 5) and the comparable postexercise hyperemic response of MBF and TOI may (see below for a conflicting perspective) support the suggestion (31) that IMP at 60% MVC is sufficient to occlude blood flow to the contracting muscle, most likely at the lower-order arterioles or the capillary bed (15,28).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 80%
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“…Nevertheless, the similarity of NIRS-derived oxygen saturation at 60 and 100% MVC during exercise (Fig. 5) and the comparable postexercise hyperemic response of MBF and TOI may (see below for a conflicting perspective) support the suggestion (31) that IMP at 60% MVC is sufficient to occlude blood flow to the contracting muscle, most likely at the lower-order arterioles or the capillary bed (15,28).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…In a variety of muscle groups (e.g., elbow flexors, knee extensors, plantar flexors, and dorsiflexors), data collected indirectly using isotope clearance (22), VOP (25), or fMRI (31) suggest that the IMP generated during isometric exercise will occlude MBF at a relative contraction strength of 50 -65% MVC (60% MVC in the dorsiflexors of young males; Ref. 31).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The alterations noticed in this experimental model seemed to be due to muscular ischemia [15], either due to the progressive arteries stretching inside the convex side muscle or due to trauma during the costotransversectomy procedure. Further works are needed in human idiopathic scoliosis to see if the same pathological process happens in the paraspinal muscles using muscle blood flow measurement ''in site'' with magnetic resonance techniques [25,46]. …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%