Literature DB >> 21263118

Impact of aging on conduit artery retrograde and oscillatory shear at rest and during exercise: role of nitric oxide.

Jaume Padilla1, Grant H Simmons, Paul J Fadel, M Harold Laughlin, Michael J Joyner, Darren P Casey.   

Abstract

Aging has been recently associated with increased retrograde and oscillatory shear in peripheral conduit arteries, a hemodynamic environment that favors a proatherogenic endothelial cell phenotype. We evaluated whether nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability in resistance vessels contributes to age-related differences in shear rate patterns in upstream conduit arteries at rest and during rhythmic muscle contraction. Younger (n=11, age 26 ± 2 years) and older (n=11, age 61 ± 2 years) healthy subjects received intra-arterial saline (control) and the NO synthase inhibitor N(G)-Monomethyl-L-arginine. Brachial artery diameter and velocities were measured via Doppler ultrasound at rest and during a 5-minute bout of rhythmic forearm exercise. At rest, older subjects exhibited greater brachial artery retrograde and oscillatory shear (-13.2 ± 3.0 s(-1) and 0.11 ± .0.02 arbitrary units, respectively) compared with young subjects (-4.8 ± 2.3 s(-1) and 0.04 ± 0.02 arbitrary units, respectively; both P<0.05). NO synthase inhibition in the forearm circulation of young, but not of older, subjects increased retrograde and oscillatory shear (both P<0.05), such that differences between young and old at rest were abolished (both P>0.05). From rest to steady-state exercise, older subjects decreased retrograde and oscillatory shear (both P<0.05) to the extent that no exercise-related differences were found between groups (both P>0.05). Inhibition of NO synthase in the forearm circulation did not affect retrograde and oscillatory shear during exercise in either group (all P>0.05). These data demonstrate for the first time that reduced NO bioavailability in the resistance vessels contributes, in part, to age-related discrepancies in resting shear patterns, thus identifying a potential mechanism for increased risk of atherosclerotic disease in conduit arteries.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21263118      PMCID: PMC3049300          DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.110.165365

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hypertension        ISSN: 0194-911X            Impact factor:   10.190


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