نتایج جستجو برای: skin blood flow

تعداد نتایج: 1258060  

Journal: :The Journal of clinical investigation 1970
G D Beiser R Zelis S E Epstein D T Mason E Braunwald

The role of skin and muscle vascular beds in baroreceptor-mediated alterations of peripheral vascular resistance was evaluated in six normal subjects in whom the skin circulation in one forearm was temporarily suppressed by epinephrine iontophoresis. Baroreceptor activity was enhanced by application of negative pressure to the neck (neck suction) and inhibited by application of lower body negat...

Journal: :Lymphology 1997
H Brorson H Svensson

Twelve women with arm lymphedema after breast cancer treatment underwent liposuction followed by external compression with a garment-sleeve. Arm volumes were measured using water displacement technique, and skin blood flow was recorded with laser Doppler imaging (LDI). Data was collected before and after (3 and 12 months) liposuction. Episodes of cellulitis were also recorded. Whereas previous ...

Journal: :Circulation research 1969
R Zelis D T Mason E Braunwald

The purpose of this study was to determine the relative effects of various levels of exercise on blood flow to skin and muscle of the resting extremity of normal subjects and the manner in which this distribution is modified by congestive heart failure. Blood flow to the skin and muscle of the forearm was determined plethysmographically with the aid of epinephrine iontophoresis at rest and duri...

Journal: :Advances in physiology education 2014
E A Tansey S M Roe C J Johnson

When a subject is heated, the stimulation of temperature-sensitive nerve endings in the skin, and the raising of the central body temperature, results in the reflex release of sympathetic vasoconstrictor tone in the skin of the extremities, causing a measurable temperature increase at the site of release. In the sympathetic release test, the subject is gently heated by placing the feet and calv...

2011
Jerrold Petrofsky Neha Goraksh Faris Alshammari Mitali Mohanan Janhavi Soni Moxi Trivedi Haneul Lee Akshay N. Hudlikar Chia-hao Yang Brindha Agilan Nikhila Pai Tirupathi Chindam Vengatesh Murugesan Jong Eun Yim Vahishta Katrak

BACKGROUND When heat is applied to the skin, it is dissipated due to conductive heat flow in the tissue and the blood. While heat flow has been studied after applying a single heat exposure, the physiology of repeated exposures to local heat has not been well investigated. MATERIAL/METHODS Twenty male and female subjects in the age range of 20-65 years old participated in a series of experime...

Journal: :Journal of applied physiology 2010
Lacy A Holowatz W Larry Kenney

Human skin blood flow is controlled via dual innervation from the sympathetic nervous system. Reflex cutaneous vasoconstriction and vasodilation are both impaired with primary aging, rendering the aged more vulnerable to hypothermia and cardiovascular complications from heat-related illness. Age-related alterations in the thermoregulatory control of skin blood flow occur at multiple points alon...

Journal: :Journal of applied physiology 2011
Ilkka Heinonen R Matthew Brothers Jukka Kemppainen Juhani Knuuti Kari K Kalliokoski Craig G Crandall

For decades it was believed that direct and indirect heating (the latter of which elevates blood and core temperatures without directly heating the area being evaluated) increases skin but not skeletal muscle blood flow. Recent results, however, suggest that passive heating of the leg may increase muscle blood flow. Using the technique of positron-emission tomography, the present study tested t...

Journal: :Journal of applied physiology 1998
C T Minson S L Wladkowski A F Cardell J A Pawelczyk W L Kenney

During direct passive heating in young men, a dramatic increase in skin blood flow is achieved by a rise in cardiac output (Qc) and redistribution of flow from the splanchnic and renal vascular beds. To examine the effect of age on these responses, seven young (Y; 23 +/- 1 yr) and seven older (O; 70 +/- 3 yr) men were passively heated with water-perfused suits to their individual limit of therm...

Journal: :Journal of applied physiology 2006
Ollie Jay George Havenith

To assess the presence and magnitude of the effect of skin blood flow on finger skin cooling on contact with cold objects against the background of circulatory disorder risks in occupational exposures, this study investigates the effect of zero vs. close-to-maximal hand blood flow on short-term (< or =180 s) skin contact cooling response at a contact pressure that allows capillary perfusion of ...

Journal: :Circulation 1963
J D COFFMAN S L JAVETT

THE cutaneous vasoconstrictive effect of tobacco smoking has been demonstrated by several groups.1-4 In about 50 per celit of people, smoking has been reported to diminish the increase in foot blood flow, called reactive hyperemia, which follows a period of arterial occlusion. Experiments on patients with sympathectomized limbs showed that the decrease in reactive hyperemia was mediated through...

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