Age related blood flow around the Achilles tendon during exercise in humans

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Injuries due to the overuse of tendons increase with age, and it has been suggested that this correlates with hypovascularity of the tendon. In the present study, the peritendinous blood flow was determined using xenon-133 washout at rest and during standardised intermittent exercise of the calf-muscle (1.5 s contraction, 1.5 s rest, 40 min) in young (n = 6; 26 years), middle-aged (n = 6; 48 years), and older (n = 6; 74 years) individuals. At rest, the older individuals had a lower peritendinous blood flow compared with the two other age groups. During exercise, blood flow in all three groups rose 2.5-3.5-fold to reveal similar blood flows [2.7 (SEM 0.5) to 7.8 (SEM 1.0) ml.100 g tissue-1 min-1 (young group); 3.0 (SEM 0.4) to 7.3 (SEM 1.6) ml.100 g tissue-1 min-1 (middle-aged group); 1.6 (SEM 0.2) to 5.5 (SEM 1.1) ml 100 g tissue-1.min-1 (older group)]. The findings demonstrated that the peritendinous blood flow to the zone of the tendon with the highest incidence of injury from overuse is unaltered by age during exercise, and indicates that factors other than blood flow are important for the increased incidence with age of injuries from overuse.
Original languageEnglish
JournalEuropean Journal of Applied Physiology
Volume84
Issue number3
Pages (from-to)246-8
Number of pages3
ISSN1439-6319
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2001

    Research areas

  • Achilles Tendon, Adult, Aged, Aging, Exercise, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Muscle Contraction, Muscle, Skeletal, Regional Blood Flow, Rest

ID: 38368098