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Cutaneous vasodilatation responses synchronize with sweat expulsions
Authors:Junichi Sugenoya  Tokuo Ogawa  Kazuno Jmai  Norikazu Ohnishi  Keiko Natsume
Affiliation:(1) Department of Physiology, Aichi Medical University, 480-11 Nagakute, Aichi, Japan
Abstract:To examine whether cutaneous active vasodilatation is mediated by sudomotor nerve fibres we recorded cutaneous blood flow and sweat rates continuously with laser-Doppler flowmetry and capacitance hygrometry, respectively, from the dorsal and plantar aspects of the foot in 11 male subjects at varying ambient temperatures (Ta) between 22 and 40°C (relative humidity 40%). In a warmer environment (Ta 29–40°C), predominant responses of the blood flow curve from the sole of the foot were transient depressions (negative blood flow responses, NBR), whereas those from the dorsal foot were transient increases (positive blood flow responses, PBR). The PBR on the dorsal foot occurred spontaneously or in response to mental or sensory stimuli, and when PBR did not fuse with each other the rate of PBR was linearly related to tympanic temperature. When dorsal foot sweating was continuous, PBR on the dorsal foot almost entirely synchronized with sweat expulsion. When dorsal foot sweating was intermittent PBR sometimes occurred on the dorsal foot without corresponding sweat expulsions, but these PBR showed a complete correspondence with subthreshold sweat expulsion seen on a methacholine-treated area. The amplitude and the duration of PBR showed a significant linear relationship with the amplitude and the duration of the corresponding sweat expulsion. In a thermoneutral or cooler environment (Ta 22–29°C), PBR occurred on the sole of the foot when mental or sensory stimuli elicited sweating in that area. Thus, PBR occurred when and where sweating appeared. Atropine failed to abolish PBR on the dorsal foot. Blockade of the peroneal nerve eliminated both PBR and NBR on the dorsal foot. The results indicate that an active vasodilatation mechanism is present on the sole of the foot as well as on the dorsal foot, and thus suggest that active vasodilatation is closely related to sudomotor nerve activation.
Keywords:Sweating  Sweat expulsion  Cutaneous vasodilatation  Cutaneous vasoconstriction  Sudomotor nerve activity  Laser-Doppler flowmetry
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