scholarly journals Evaluation of Local Skeletal Muscle Blood Flow in Manipulative Therapy by Diffuse Correlation Spectroscopy

Author(s):  
Yasuhiro Matsuda ◽  
Mikie Nakabayashi ◽  
Tatsuya Suzuki ◽  
Sinan Zhang ◽  
Masashi Ichinose ◽  
...  

Manipulative therapy (MT) is applied to motor organs through a therapist’s hands. Although MT has been utilized in various medical treatments based on its potential role for increasing the blood flow to the local muscle, a quantitative validation of local muscle blood flow in MT remains challenging due to the lack of appropriate bedside evaluation techniques. Therefore, we investigated changes in the local blood flow to the muscle undergoing MT by employing diffuse correlation spectroscopy, a portable and emerging optical measurement technology that non-invasively measures blood flow in deep tissues. This study investigated the changes in blood flow, heart rate, blood pressure, and autonomic nervous activity in the trapezius muscle through MT application in 30 volunteers without neck and shoulder injury. Five minutes of MT significantly increased the median local blood flow relative to that of the pre-MT period (p < 0.05). The post-MT local blood flow increase was significantly higher in the MT condition than in the control condition, where participants remained still without receiving MT for the same time (p < 0.05). However, MT did not affect the heart rate, blood pressure, or cardiac autonomic nervous activity. The post-MT increase in muscle blood flow was significantly higher in the participants with muscle stiffness in the neck and shoulder regions than in those without (p < 0.05). These results suggest that MT could increase the local blood flow to the target skeletal muscle, with minimal effects on systemic circulatory function.

Author(s):  
Miles F. Bartlett ◽  
Scott M. Jordan ◽  
Dennis M. Hueber ◽  
Michael D. Nelson

Near-infrared diffuse correlation spectroscopy (DCS) is increasingly utilized to study relative changes in skeletal muscle blood flow. However, most diffuse correlation spectrometers assume that tissue optical properties- such as absorption (μa) and reduced scattering (μ's) coefficients- remain constant during physiological provocations, which is untrue for skeletal muscle. Here, we interrogate how changes in tissue μa and μ's affect DCS calculations of blood flow index (BFI). We recalculated BFI using raw autocorrelation curves and μa/μ's values recorded during a reactive hyperemia protocol in 16 healthy young individuals. First, we show that incorrectly assuming baseline μa and μ's substantially affects peak BFI and BFI slope when expressed in absolute terms (cm2/s, p<0.01) but these differences are abolished when expressed in relative terms (% baseline). Next, to evaluate the impact of physiologic changes in μa and μ's, we compared peak BFI and BFI slope when μa and μ's were held constant throughout the reactive hyperemia protocol versus integrated from a 3s-rolling average. Regardless of approach, group means for peak BFI and BFI slope did not differ. Group means for peak BFI and BFI slope were also similar following ad absurdum analyses, where we simulated supraphysiologic changes in μa/μ's. In both cases, however, we identified individual cases where peak BFI and BFI slope were indeed affected, with this result being driven by relative changes in μa over μ's. Overall, these results provide support for past reports in which μa/μ's were held constant but also advocate for real-time incorporation of μa and μ's moving forward.


2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chandan-Ganesh Bangalore-Yogananda ◽  
Ryan Rosenberry ◽  
Sagar Soni ◽  
Hanli Liu ◽  
Michael D. Nelson ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 1064 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guoqiang Yu ◽  
Thomas F. Floyd ◽  
Turgut Durduran ◽  
Chao Zhou ◽  
Jiongjiong Wang ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 318 (1) ◽  
pp. R81-R88
Author(s):  
Wesley J. Tucker ◽  
Ryan Rosenberry ◽  
Darian Trojacek ◽  
Belinda Sanchez ◽  
Robert F. Bentley ◽  
...  

Near-infrared diffuse correlation spectroscopy (NIR-DCS) is an emerging technology for simultaneous measurement of skeletal muscle microvascular oxygen delivery and utilization during exercise. The extent to which NIR-DCS can track acute changes in oxygen delivery and utilization has not yet been fully established. To address this knowledge gap, 14 healthy men performed rhythmic handgrip exercise at 30% maximal voluntary contraction, with and without isolated brachial artery compression, designed to acutely reduce convective oxygen delivery to the exercising muscle. Radial artery blood flow (Duplex Ultrasound) and NIR-DCS derived variables [blood flow index (BFI), tissue oxygen saturation ([Formula: see text]), and metabolic rate of oxygen ([Formula: see text])] were simultaneously measured. During exercise, both radial artery blood flow (+51.6 ± 20.3 mL/min) and DCS-derived BFI (+155.0 ± 82.2%) increased significantly ( P < 0.001), whereas [Formula: see text] decreased −7.9 ± 6.2% ( P = 0.002) from rest. Brachial artery compression during exercise caused a significant reduction in both radial artery blood flow (−32.0 ± 19.5 mL/min, P = 0.001) and DCS-derived BFI (−57.3 ± 51.1%, P = 0.01) and a further reduction of [Formula: see text] (−5.6 ± 3.8%, P = 0.001) compared with exercise without compression. [Formula: see text] was not significantly reduced during arterial compression ( P = 0.83) due to compensatory reductions in [Formula: see text], driven by increases in deoxyhemoglobin/myoglobin (+7.1 ± 6.1 μM, P = 0.01; an index of oxygen extraction). Together, these proof-of-concept data help to further validate NIR-DCS as an effective tool to assess the determinants of skeletal muscle oxygen consumption at the level of the microvasculature during exercise.


1986 ◽  
Vol 250 (1) ◽  
pp. R30-R35 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. M. Thornton ◽  
D. W. Proppe

The influence of dehydration on hindlimb vasodilation during environmental heating (EH) was examined in eight unanesthetized chronically instrumented baboons. Mean iliac blood flow (MIBF), arterial blood pressure, and core temperature (Tc) were measured during EH of baboons in euhydrated and dehydrated states. EH consisted of acute exposure to high ambient temperatures (39-44 degrees C) until Tc reached 39.5 degrees C. Dehydration was produced by 68-72 h of fluid deprivation, which caused increases in plasma osmolality [291 +/- 1 (SE) to 338 +/- 6 mosmol/kg H2O] and sodium concentration (143 +/- 2 to 163 +/- 3 meq/l) and a 16% fall in plasma volume. The primary influence of dehydration was attenuation of the progressive rise in MIBF and iliac conductance (IC) during EH. Absolute MIBF and IC levels at Tc = 39.5 degrees C during EH were 44 and 52%, respectively, lower in the dehydrated state. Also, the MIBF-Tc and IC-Tc linear regression coefficients during EH were lower by 33 and 43%, respectively, in the dehydrated state. Since limb skeletal muscle blood flow does not increase during EH, we conclude that dehydration attenuates the heat stress-induced rise in skin blood flow in baboons, an influence that is similar to what occurs in humans.


2004 ◽  
Vol 97 (2) ◽  
pp. 731-738 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gail D. Thomas ◽  
Steven S. Segal

Activation of skeletal muscle fibers by somatic nerves results in vasodilation and functional hyperemia. Sympathetic nerve activity is integral to vasoconstriction and the maintenance of arterial blood pressure. Thus the interaction between somatic and sympathetic neuroeffector pathways underlies blood flow control to skeletal muscle during exercise. Muscle blood flow increases in proportion to the intensity of activity despite concomitant increases in sympathetic neural discharge to the active muscles, indicating a reduced responsiveness to sympathetic activation. However, increased sympathetic nerve activity can restrict blood flow to active muscles to maintain arterial blood pressure. In this brief review, we highlight recent advances in our understanding of the neural control of the circulation in exercising muscle by focusing on two main topics: 1) the role of motor unit recruitment and muscle fiber activation in generating vasodilator signals and 2) the nature of interaction between sympathetic vasoconstriction and functional vasodilation that occurs throughout the resistance network. Understanding how these control systems interact to govern muscle blood flow during exercise leads to a clear set of specific aims for future research.


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