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      Postexercise hypotension and sustained postexercise vasodilatation: what happens after we exercise?

      1 , , ,
      Experimental physiology
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          A single bout of aerobic exercise produces a postexercise hypotension associated with a sustained postexercise vasodilatation of the previously exercised muscle. Work over the last few years has determined key pathways for the obligatory components of postexercise hypotension and sustained postexercise vasodilatation and points the way to possible benefits that may result from these robust responses. During the exercise recovery period, the combination of centrally mediated decreases in sympathetic nerve activity with a reduced signal transduction from sympathetic nerve activation into vasoconstriction, as well as local vasodilator mechanisms, contributes to the fall in arterial blood pressure seen after exercise. Important findings from recent studies include the recognition that skeletal muscle afferents may play a primary role in postexercise resetting of the baroreflex via discrete receptor changes within the nucleus tractus solitarii and that sustained postexercise vasodilatation of the previously active skeletal muscle is primarily the result of histamine H(1) and H(2) receptor activation. Future research directions include further exploration of the potential benefits of these changes in the longer term adaptations associated with exercise training, as well as investigation of how the recovery from exercise may provide windows of opportunity for targeted interventions in patients with hypertension and diabetes.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Exp Physiol
          Experimental physiology
          Wiley
          1469-445X
          0958-0670
          Jan 2013
          : 98
          : 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Human Physiology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403-1240, USA. halliwil@uoregon.edu
          Article
          expphysiol.2011.058065
          10.1113/expphysiol.2011.058065
          22872658
          27888361-3346-4967-ae9f-5f8b29d2a2d1
          History

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