Role of nitric oxide and adenosine in control of coronary blood flow in exercising dogs.

PubWeight™: 0.94‹?›

🔗 View Article (PMID 10869267)

Published in Circulation on June 27, 2000

Authors

J D Tune1, K N Richmond, M W Gorman, E O Feigl

Author Affiliations

1: Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA 98195-7290, USA.

Articles citing this

Circulating ATP-induced vasodilatation overrides sympathetic vasoconstrictor activity in human skeletal muscle. J Physiol (2004) 2.21

Regulation of increased blood flow (hyperemia) to muscles during exercise: a hierarchy of competing physiological needs. Physiol Rev (2015) 1.19

Contribution of BK(Ca) channels to local metabolic coronary vasodilation: Effects of metabolic syndrome. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol (2009) 1.02

Heart of the matter: coronary dysfunction in metabolic syndrome. J Mol Cell Cardiol (2011) 0.99

Effects of chronic nitric oxide synthase inhibition on responses to acute exercise in swine. J Appl Physiol (1985) (2007) 0.97

Homogenous protein programming in the mammalian left and right ventricle free walls. Physiol Genomics (2011) 0.86

Adenine nucleotide control of coronary blood flow during exercise. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol (2010) 0.81

Metabolic hyperemia requires ATP-sensitive K+ channels and H2O2 but not adenosine in isolated mouse hearts. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol (2014) 0.80

Functional contribution of P2Y1 receptors to the control of coronary blood flow. J Appl Physiol (1985) (2011) 0.80

Molecular Mechanisms of Right Ventricular Failure. Circulation (2015) 0.79

Coronary blood flow becomes uncoupled from myocardial work during obstructive sleep apnea in the presence of endothelial dysfunction. Sleep (2008) 0.78

Phosphodiesterase-5 activity exerts a coronary vasoconstrictor influence in awake swine that is mediated in part via an increase in endothelin production. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol (2014) 0.78

Exercise hyperaemia in the heart: the search for the dilator mechanism. J Physiol (2007) 0.78

Benefits of exercise training on coronary blood flow in coronary artery disease patients. Prog Cardiovasc Dis (2014) 0.77

Articles by these authors

Coronary physiology. Physiol Rev (1983) 3.33

EDRF--a protective factor? Nature (1988) 1.67

Work as a correlate of canine left ventricular oxygen consumption, and the problem of catecholamine oxygen wasting. Circ Res (1982) 1.44

Myoglobin oxygen dissociation by multiwavelength spectroscopy. J Appl Physiol (1985) (1997) 1.42

Sympathetic control of coronary circulation. Circ Res (1967) 1.39

Competition between sympathetic vasoconstriction and metabolic vasodilation in the canine coronary circulation. Circ Res (1978) 1.34

Transcapillary adenosine transport and interstitial adenosine concentration in guinea pig hearts. Am J Physiol (1989) 1.26

Parasympathetic control of coronary blood flow in dogs. Circ Res (1969) 1.17

Endothelial cell uptake of adenosine in canine skeletal muscle. Am J Physiol (1986) 1.16

Role of endothelium-derived relaxing factor in parasympathetic coronary vasodilation. Am J Physiol (1992) 1.10

Adrenergic coronary vasoconstriction helps maintain uniform transmural blood flow distribution during exercise. Circ Res (1988) 1.10

K(ATP)(+) channels, nitric oxide, and adenosine are not required for local metabolic coronary vasodilation. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol (2001) 1.05

Modeling of transendothelial transport. Fed Proc (1985) 1.01

Feedforward sympathetic coronary vasodilation in exercising dogs. J Appl Physiol (1985) (2000) 1.00

Adenosine release into venous plasma during free flow exercise. Proc Soc Exp Biol Med (1986) 0.96

Diffusional shunting in the canine myocardium. Circ Res (1981) 0.95

Quantitative relation between interstitial adenosine concentration and coronary blood flow. Circ Res (1996) 0.95

Control of myocardial oxygen tension by sympathetic coronary vasoconstriction in the dog. Circ Res (1975) 0.94

Auxotonic and isometric cardiac force transducers. J Appl Physiol (1967) 0.94

Reflex parasympathetic coronary vasodilation elicited from cardiac receptors in the dog. Circ Res (1975) 0.93

Adenosine is not responsible for local metabolic control of coronary blood flow in dogs during exercise. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol (2000) 0.92

Quantitative analysis of feedforward sympathetic coronary vasodilation in exercising dogs. J Appl Physiol (1985) (2000) 0.92

Feedforward control of coronary blood flow via coronary beta-receptor stimulation. Circ Res (1993) 0.91

Adenosine is unimportant in controlling coronary blood flow in unstressed dog hearts. Am J Physiol (1985) 0.90

Carotid sinus reflex control of coronary blood flow. Circ Res (1968) 0.90

Sympathetic control of cerebral blood flow in dogs. Circ Res (1972) 0.90

Adrenergic blockade blunts adenosine concentration and coronary vasodilation during hypoxia. Circ Res (1992) 0.89

Progressive coronary vasoconstriction during relative ischemia in canine myocardium. Circ Res (1982) 0.89

Capillary transport of adenosine. Fed Proc (1985) 0.88

Carotid sinus reflex coronary vasoconstriction during controlled myocardial oxygen metabolism in the dog. Circ Res (1979) 0.87

Alteration of cardiovascular and neuronal function in M1 knockout mice. Life Sci (2001) 0.87

Synergistic action of myocardial oxygen and carbon dioxide in controlling coronary blood flow. Circ Res (1991) 0.87

Aminophylline and interstitial adenosine during sustained exercise hyperemia. Am J Physiol (1986) 0.85

Segmental alpha-receptor-mediated vasoconstriction in the canine coronary circulation. Circ Res (1978) 0.85

Role of myocardial oxygen and carbon dioxide in coronary autoregulation. Am J Physiol (1992) 0.85

Effects of stimulation frequency on myocardial extensibility. Circ Res (1967) 0.84

Analysis of coronary vascular beta receptors in situ. Am J Physiol (1975) 0.84

Normal arterial blood pH, oxygen, and carbon dioxide tensions in unanesthetized dogs. J Appl Physiol (1972) 0.83

K+ATP channels and adenosine are not necessary for coronary autoregulation. Am J Physiol (1997) 0.83

Role of K+ATP channels in local metabolic coronary vasodilation. Am J Physiol (1999) 0.82

Differential effect of behavior on cardiac and vasomotor baroreflex responses. Am J Physiol (1986) 0.82

Role of K(ATP)(+) channels and adenosine in the control of coronary blood flow during exercise. J Appl Physiol (1985) (2000) 0.82

Role of adenosine in local metabolic coronary vasodilation. Am J Physiol (1999) 0.82

Alpha-adrenergic vasoconstriction reduces systolic retrograde coronary blood flow. Am J Physiol (1997) 0.81

Carotid baroreceptor reflex coronary vasodilation in the dog. Circ Res (1985) 0.81

Acetylcholine causes coronary vasodilation in dogs and baboons. Circ Res (1989) 0.80

Carotid sinus reflex influence on plasma renin activity. Am J Physiol (1978) 0.80

Parasympathetic control of transmural coronary blood flow in dogs. Am J Physiol (1985) 0.80

Cannula-tip coronary blood flow transducer for use in closed-chest animals. J Appl Physiol (1974) 0.79

A model of combined feedforward and feedback control of coronary blood flow. Am J Physiol (1995) 0.79

Adrenergic vasoconstriction lessens transmural steal during coronary hypoperfusion. Am J Physiol (1986) 0.79

Role of adenosine in norepinephrine-induced coronary vasodilation. Am J Physiol (1997) 0.78

Adenosine formation and energy status during hypoperfusion and 2-deoxyglucose infusion. Am J Physiol (1991) 0.78

Coronary vascular sympathetic beta-receptor innervation. Am J Physiol (1976) 0.78

Carotid chemoreceptor reflex parasympathetic coronary vasodilation in the dog. Am J Physiol (1985) 0.78

Angiotensin causes vasoconstriction during hemorrhage in baroreceptor-denervated dogs. Am J Physiol (1983) 0.78

Beta-receptor subtypes in the canine coronary circulation. Am J Physiol (1990) 0.77

Adrenergic coronary vasoconstriction in the presence of coronary stenosis in the dog. Circ Res (1981) 0.77

Nitroglycerin causes vasodilatation within ischaemic myocardium. Cardiovasc Res (1980) 0.76

Parasympathetic control of coronary blood flow. Fed Proc (1984) 0.76

Adenosine formation and myocardial energy status during graded hypoxia. J Mol Cell Cardiol (1992) 0.76

Adrenergic coronary vasoconstriction during myocardial underperfusion. Circulation (1987) 0.76

Suppression of renin activity by hypothalamic stimulation. Circ Res (1973) 0.76

Cuvette for continuously measuring blood oxygen tension. J Appl Physiol (1971) 0.75

Myocardial contractile force in hemorrhagic shock. Surg Forum (1969) 0.75

Elevation of plasma renin activity during avoidance performance in baboons. Am J Physiol (1976) 0.75

Subtraction method for the high-performance liquid chromatographic measurement of plasma adenosine. J Chromatogr (1992) 0.75

Electrode and cuvette for rapid continuous CO2 tension and pH measurement in blood. J Appl Physiol (1985) (1985) 0.75

Technique for producing heart block in closed-chest dogs without electrical recording. Pflugers Arch (1983) 0.75

Progressive vasomotor changes in ischaemic myocardium. Acta Med Scand Suppl (1985) 0.75

Mechanism of Prinzmetal angina. N Engl J Med (1973) 0.75

Blood oxygen content estimated from PO2, PCO2, and pH. Am J Physiol (1988) 0.75

Effect of coronary artery pressure on transmural distribution of adrenergic coronary vasoconstriction in the dog. Circ Res (1983) 0.75

Systole has little effect on diastolic coronary artery blood flow. Circ Res (1988) 0.75

Little carbon dioxide diffusional shunting in coronary circulation. Am J Physiol (1987) 0.75

Adenosine formation and energy status in isolated guinea pig hearts perfused with erythrocytes. Am J Physiol (1992) 0.75

Dilemmas of angina pectoris. N Engl J Med (1969) 0.75

EDRF and norepinephrine-induced vasodilation in the canine coronary circulation. Am J Physiol (1995) 0.75

Metabolic interaction between skeletal muscle and liver during bacteremia. Arch Surg (1988) 0.75