Literature DB >> 30382805

Evidence of sex differences in the acute impact of oscillatory shear stress on endothelial function.

Joshua C Tremblay1, Taylor V Stimpson1, Kyra E Pyke1.   

Abstract

Acutely imposed oscillatory shear stress (OSS) reduces reactive hyperemia flow-mediated dilation (RH-FMD) in conduit arteries of men; however, whether a similar impairment occurs in women or with FMD in response to a controlled, sustained shear stress stimulus (SS-FMD) is unknown. The purpose of this study was to determine the impact of OSS on RH-FMD and SS-FMD in men and women. OSS was provoked in the brachial artery using a 30-min forearm cuff inflation (70 mmHg). Healthy men [ n = 16, 25 yr (SD 3)] and women [ n = 16, 21 yr (SD 2)] completed the OSS intervention twice (separate days). Brachial artery endothelial function was assessed pre- and postintervention via either RH-FMD or 6 min of handgrip SS-FMD using Duplex ultrasound. The RH-FMD stimulus was calculated as shear rate area under the curve 60 s postdeflation (SRAUC60), whereas SS-FMD shear rate was targeted to produce a similar stimulus pre- and postintervention. The OSS intervention decreased RH-FMD in both sexes [men: 6.2% (SD 3.4) to 5.2% (SD 3.0); women: 5.4% (SD 2.0) to 3.1% (SD 1.8), P < 0.001), although this was accompanied by a reduced SRAUC60. There was no significant effect of the intervention on RH-FMD with SRAUC60 as a covariate ( P = 0.310). Handgrip exercise elicited a similar stimulus before and after the intervention ( P = 0.287) in men and women ( P = 0.873). Men demonstrated blunted SS-FMD [4.8% (SD 1.9) to 3.2% (SD 1.9), P < 0.001], whereas women displayed preserved SS-FMD following the intervention [3.5% (SD 1.9) to 4.0% (SD 1.9), P = 0.061]. The lower SS-FMD in men but not women following OSS provides evidence of sex differences in the effects of OSS on conduit artery endothelial function. NEW &amp; NOTEWORTHY Acute exposure to oscillatory shear stress induces transient endothelial dysfunction in men; however, whether women experience similar impairments is unknown. Following acutely imposed oscillatory shear stress, there was a decrease in flow-mediated dilation stimulated by a physiologically relevant sustained increase in shear stress in men but not in premenopausal women. These findings demonstrate, for the first time in humans that there are sex differences in the impact of oscillatory shear stress on endothelial function.

Entities:  

Keywords:  SS-FMD; brachial artery; flow-mediated dilation; handgrip exercise; retrograde shear stress

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30382805      PMCID: PMC6397415          DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00729.2018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)        ISSN: 0161-7567


  52 in total

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Authors:  D Walter Wray; Melissa A H Witman; Stephen J Ives; John McDaniel; Anette S Fjeldstad; Joel D Trinity; Jamie D Conklin; Mark A Supiano; Russell S Richardson
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10.  Impact of shear rate pattern on upper and lower limb conduit artery endothelial function in both spinal cord-injured and able-bodied men.

Authors:  J O Totosy de Zepetnek; D S Ditor; J S Au; M J MacDonald
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1.  Examining the acute effects of retrograde versus low mean shear rate on flow-mediated dilation.

Authors:  Joshua C Tremblay; Arman S Grewal; Kyra E Pyke
Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)       Date:  2019-03-07

2.  Ramp and step increases in shear stress result in a similar magnitude of brachial artery flow-mediated dilation.

Authors:  Joshua C Tremblay; Jennifer S Williams; Kyra E Pyke
Journal:  Eur J Appl Physiol       Date:  2019-01-02       Impact factor: 3.078

3.  The impact of repeated, local heating-induced increases in blood flow on lower limb endothelial function in young, healthy females.

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