Local thermal control of the human cutaneous circulation

John M Johnson, Dean L Kellogg Jr, John M Johnson, Dean L Kellogg Jr

Abstract

The level of skin blood flow is subject to both reflex thermoregulatory control and influences from the direct effects of warming and cooling the skin. The effects of local changes in temperature are capable of maximally vasoconstricting or vasodilating the skin. They are brought about by a combination of mechanisms involving endothelial, adrenergic, and sensory systems. Local warming initiates a transient vasodilation through an axon reflex, succeeded by a plateau phase due largely to nitric oxide. Both phases are supported by sympathetic transmitters. The plateau phase is followed by the die-away phenomenon, a slow reversal of the vasodilation that is dependent on intact sympathetic vasoconstrictor nerves. The vasoconstriction with local skin cooling is brought about, in part, by a postsynaptic upregulation of α(2c)-adrenoceptors and, in part, by inhibition of the nitric oxide system at at least two points. There is also an early vasodilator response to local cooling, dependent on the rate of cooling. The mechanism for that transient vasodilation is not known, but it is inhibited by intact sympathetic vasoconstrictor nerve function and by intact sensory nerve function.

Figures

Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.
Cutaneous vascular response to rapid local skin warming. Top: pattern of the blood flow response to local warming, including an early transient vasodilation (axon reflex), a more sustained plateau vasodilation, and a later die-away phenomenon. Bottom: our current understanding of the mechanisms leading to that pattern, including roles for the endothelium and nitric oxide (NO) generation, sympathetic transmitters and cotransmitters, and warm-sensitive afferents. NEPI, norepinephrine; NPY, neuropeptide Y.
Fig. 2.
Fig. 2.
Cutaneous vascular response to rapid local skin cooling. Top: pattern of the response in skin blood flow to local cooling, including a transient early vasodilation (made more obvious when cooling is rapid or sensory, or adrenergic nerve function is blocked locally), followed by a sustained vasoconstriction when the cooling is prolonged. Bottom: mechanisms and structures important in generating that pattern, including inhibition of the endothelial NO synthase system, an upregulation of α2c-receptors, sympathetic vasoconstrictor nerves, and cold-sensitive afferents.

Source: PubMed

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