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Whole body passive heating versus dynamic lower body exercise: A comparison of peripheral hemodynamic profiles. / Amin, Sachin; Hansen, Alexander; Mugele, Hendrik et al.
In: Journal of Applied Physiology, Vol. 130, No. 1, 01.2021, p. 160-171.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Amin, S, Hansen, A, Mugele, H, Willmer, F, Gross, F, Reimer, B, Cornwell, W, Simpson, L, Moore, J, Romero, S & Lawley, J 2021, 'Whole body passive heating versus dynamic lower body exercise: A comparison of peripheral hemodynamic profiles', Journal of Applied Physiology, vol. 130, no. 1, pp. 160-171. https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00291.2020

APA

Amin, S., Hansen, A., Mugele, H., Willmer, F., Gross, F., Reimer, B., Cornwell, W., Simpson, L., Moore, J., Romero, S., & Lawley, J. (2021). Whole body passive heating versus dynamic lower body exercise: A comparison of peripheral hemodynamic profiles. Journal of Applied Physiology, 130(1), 160-171. https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00291.2020

CBE

Amin S, Hansen A, Mugele H, Willmer F, Gross F, Reimer B, Cornwell W, Simpson L, Moore J, Romero S, et al. 2021. Whole body passive heating versus dynamic lower body exercise: A comparison of peripheral hemodynamic profiles. Journal of Applied Physiology. 130(1):160-171. https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00291.2020

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Amin S, Hansen A, Mugele H, Willmer F, Gross F, Reimer B et al. Whole body passive heating versus dynamic lower body exercise: A comparison of peripheral hemodynamic profiles. Journal of Applied Physiology. 2021 Jan;130(1):160-171. Epub 2020 Oct 22. doi: https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00291.2020

Author

Amin, Sachin ; Hansen, Alexander ; Mugele, Hendrik et al. / Whole body passive heating versus dynamic lower body exercise: A comparison of peripheral hemodynamic profiles. In: Journal of Applied Physiology. 2021 ; Vol. 130, No. 1. pp. 160-171.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Whole body passive heating versus dynamic lower body exercise: A comparison of peripheral hemodynamic profiles

AU - Amin, Sachin

AU - Hansen, Alexander

AU - Mugele, Hendrik

AU - Willmer, Felix

AU - Gross, Florian

AU - Reimer, Benjamin

AU - Cornwell, William

AU - Simpson, Lydia

AU - Moore, Jonathan

AU - Romero, Steven

AU - Lawley, Justin

PY - 2021/1

Y1 - 2021/1

N2 - Passive heating has emerged as a therapeutic intervention for the treatment and prevention of cardiovascular disease. Like exercise, heating increases peripheral artery blood flow and shear rate which is thought to be a primary mechanism underpinning endothelium mediated vascular adaptation. However, few studies have compared the increase in arterial blood flow and shear rate between dynamic exercise and passive heating. In a fixed crossover design study, 15 moderately trained healthy participants (25.6 ± 3.4 years) (5 female) underwent 30 minutes of whole body passive heating (42 °C bath), followed on a separate day by 30 minutes of semi-recumbent stepping exercise performed at two workloads corresponding to the increase in cardiac output (Qc) (Δ3.72 l∙min-1) and heart rate (HR) (Δ38 bpm) recorded at the end of passive heating. Results: At the same Qc (Δ3.72 l∙min-1 vs 3.78 l∙min-1), femoral artery blood flow (1599 ml/min vs 1947 ml/min) (p=0.596) and shear rate (162 s -1 vs 192 s-1) (p=0.471) measured by ultrasonography were similar between passive heating and stepping exercise. However, for the same HR matched intensity, femoral blood flow (1599 ml·min-1 vs 2588 ml·min-1) and shear rate (161s-1 vs 271s-1) were significantly greater during exercise, compared with heating (both P=<0.001). The results indicate that, for moderately trained individuals, passive heating increases common femoral artery blood flow and shear rate similar to low intensity continuous dynamic exercise (29% VO2max), however exercise performed at a higher intensity (53% VO2max) results in significantly larger shear rates towards the active skeletal muscle.

AB - Passive heating has emerged as a therapeutic intervention for the treatment and prevention of cardiovascular disease. Like exercise, heating increases peripheral artery blood flow and shear rate which is thought to be a primary mechanism underpinning endothelium mediated vascular adaptation. However, few studies have compared the increase in arterial blood flow and shear rate between dynamic exercise and passive heating. In a fixed crossover design study, 15 moderately trained healthy participants (25.6 ± 3.4 years) (5 female) underwent 30 minutes of whole body passive heating (42 °C bath), followed on a separate day by 30 minutes of semi-recumbent stepping exercise performed at two workloads corresponding to the increase in cardiac output (Qc) (Δ3.72 l∙min-1) and heart rate (HR) (Δ38 bpm) recorded at the end of passive heating. Results: At the same Qc (Δ3.72 l∙min-1 vs 3.78 l∙min-1), femoral artery blood flow (1599 ml/min vs 1947 ml/min) (p=0.596) and shear rate (162 s -1 vs 192 s-1) (p=0.471) measured by ultrasonography were similar between passive heating and stepping exercise. However, for the same HR matched intensity, femoral blood flow (1599 ml·min-1 vs 2588 ml·min-1) and shear rate (161s-1 vs 271s-1) were significantly greater during exercise, compared with heating (both P=<0.001). The results indicate that, for moderately trained individuals, passive heating increases common femoral artery blood flow and shear rate similar to low intensity continuous dynamic exercise (29% VO2max), however exercise performed at a higher intensity (53% VO2max) results in significantly larger shear rates towards the active skeletal muscle.

U2 - https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00291.2020

DO - https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00291.2020

M3 - Article

VL - 130

SP - 160

EP - 171

JO - Journal of Applied Physiology

JF - Journal of Applied Physiology

SN - 8750-7587

IS - 1

ER -