• Eur J Appl Physiol Occup Physiol · Nov 1998

    Leg blood flow during slow head-down tilt with and without leg venous congestion.

    • D Leyk, U Hoffmann, K Baum, H Wackerhage, and D Essfeld.
    • Institute of Sports Sciences, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-University Frankfurt am Main, Frankfurt, Germany.
    • Eur J Appl Physiol Occup Physiol. 1998 Nov 1; 78 (6): 538-43.

    AbstractThe effects of slow changes in body position on leg blood flow (LBF) were studied in nine healthy male subjects. Using a tilt table, sitting volunteers were tilted about 60 degrees backwards to a supine position within 40 s. To modify the venous filling in the legs, the tilt manoeuvre was repeated with congestion of the leg veins induced by two thigh cuffs inflated to a subdiastolic pressure of 60 mmHg. Doppler measurements in the femoral artery were used to estimate LBF. Additional Doppler measurements at the aortic root in five of the subjects were taken for the determination of cardiac output. The LBF was influenced by body position. In the control experiment it increased from 500 ml x min(-1) in the upright to 780 ml x min(-1) after 15 min in the supine position. A mean maximal value of 950 ml x min(-1) was observed 20 s after the tilt. Heart rate remained almost constant during the tilt phase, whereas stroke volume increased from 90 ml to 120 ml and it remained at that level after the cessation of the tilt. Congestion of the leg veins had no significant effect on heart rate, stroke volume and mean blood pressure. However, it increased vascular resistance of the leg during and after the tilt. After 15 min in the tilted position LBF amounted to 600 ml x min(-1). The results suggest that the filling of the leg veins is inversely related to leg blood flow. The most likely mechanism underlying this observation is a local effect of venous filling on vasomotor tone.

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