Abstract
The contribution of endogenous PG [prostaglandin] to the development of functional (exercise-induced) and reactive (post-occlusive) hyperemia was investigated in healthy volunteers. Leg blood flow during dynamic leg exercise was estimated by an indicator dilution technique. Forearm blood flow during supine leg exercise and forearm and calf blood flow following 5 min of arterial occlusion were measured plethysmographically. All subjects were examined before and after pretreatment with indomethacin, a PG synthesis inhibitor. During leg exercise, and in the absence of indomethacin, a 10-fold rise in leg blood flow was observed. Forearm blood flow increased moderately. Both these blood flow effects of exercise were unaffected by indomethacin. Following arterial occlusion a marked hyperemia developed in the forearm and the calf. Indomethacin significantly reduced the magnitude of the reactive hyperemia both in the forearm and in the calf, decreasing both the peak value and the duration of the vasodilation. These data reveal differences between the mechanisms behind functional and reactive hyperemia in man, suggesting an appreciable contribution of endogenous PG to post-occlusive vasodilation only.