Stephen B. Ruble
Medical College of Wisconsin
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Featured researches published by Stephen B. Ruble.
The Journal of Physiology | 2002
Michael E. Tschakovsky; Kittiphong Sujirattanawimol; Stephen B. Ruble; Zoran Valic; Michael J. Joyner
Sympathetic vasoconstriction of muscle vascular beds is important in the regulation of systemic blood pressure. However, vasoconstriction during exercise can also compromise blood flow support of muscle metabolism. This study tested the hypothesis that local factors in exercising muscle blunt vessel responsiveness to sympathetic vasoconstriction. We performed selective infusions of three doses of tyramine into the brachial artery (n= 8) to evoke endogenous release of noradrenaline (norepinephrine) at rest and during moderate and heavy rhythmic handgrip exercise. In separate experiments, tyramine was administered during two doses of adenosine infusion (n= 7) and two doses of sodium nitroprusside (SNP) infusion (n= 8). Vasoconstrictor effectiveness across conditions was assessed as the percentage reduction in forearm vascular conductance (FVC), calculated from invasive blood pressure and non‐invasive Doppler ultrasound blood flow measurements at the brachial artery. Tyramine evoked a similar dose‐dependent vasoconstriction at rest in all three groups, with the highest dose resulting in a 42‐46 % reduction in FVC. This vasoconstriction was blunted with increasing exercise intensity (e.g. tyramine high dose percentage reduction in FVC; rest −43.4 ± 3.7 %, moderate exercise −27.5 ± 2.3 %, heavy exercise −16.7 ± 3.6 %; P < 0.05). In contrast, tyramine infusion resulted in a greater percentage reduction in FVC during both doses of adenosine vs. rest (P < 0.05). Finally, percentage change in FVC was greater during low dose SNP infusion vs. rest (P < 0.05), but not different from rest at the high dose of SNP infusion (P= 0.507). A blunted percentage reduction in FVC during endogenous noradrenaline release in exercise but not vasodilator infusion indicates that sympathetic vasoconstriction is blunted in exercising muscle. This blunting appears to be exercise intensity‐dependent.
Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation | 2004
Martin D. Hoffman; Melissa A. Shepanski; Stephen B. Ruble; Zoran Valic; John B. Buckwalter; Philip S. Clifford
Journal of Applied Physiology | 1998
John B. Buckwalter; Stephen B. Ruble; Patrick J. Mueller; Philip S. Clifford
Journal of Applied Physiology | 2002
Zoran Valic; Jay S. Naik; Stephen B. Ruble; John B. Buckwalter; Philip S. Clifford
Journal of Applied Physiology | 2003
John B. Buckwalter; Valerie C. Curtis; Zoran Valic; Stephen B. Ruble; Philip S. Clifford
Journal of Applied Physiology | 2000
Stephen B. Ruble; Zoran Valic; John B. Buckwalter; Philip S. Clifford
Journal of Applied Physiology | 2001
Zoran Valic; Edward H. Vidruk; Stephen B. Ruble; John B. Buckwalter; Philip S. Clifford
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2001
Melissa A. Shepanski; Martin D. Hoffman; Stephen B. Ruble; Zoran Valic; John B. Buckwalter; Philip S. Clifford
The FASEB Journal | 1998
Stephen B. Ruble; John B. Buckwalter; Philip S. Clifford
Archive | 2015
Patrick J. Mueller; Philip S. Clifford; Zoran Valic; Edward H. Vidruk; Stephen B. Ruble; John B. Buckwalter