P. Vandenbrande et al., SKIN MICROCIRCULATION RESPONSES TO SEVERE LOCAL COOLING, International journal of microcirculation, clinical and experimental, 17(2), 1997, pp. 55-60
When skin is exposed to cold, cutaneous blood flow is initially restri
cted due to sympathetic vasoconstriction. Prolonged exposure to cold h
as a secondary protective vasodilator effect. In the present study, th
e effects of severe and prolonged local cold on the cutaneous microcir
culation were assessed. In 10 young healthy subjects, laser Doppler sk
in flux and flux motion were measured at the calf during 20 min of loc
al ice cooling and 15 min subsequent recovery. In the 6th minute of co
oling, mean skin flux decreased to 58 +/- 6% of the resting value (p <
0.05), then increased and reached 129 +/- 10% of the resting value at
the end of the cooling period, followed by a phase of reactive hypere
mia with a maximum of 225 +/- 24% (p < 0.05). Mean flux motion frequen
cy, spontaneously present at rest with a frequency of 2.6 +/- 0.2 cycl
es/min min decreased rapidly during the first minutes of cold exposure
, was absent during the 6th to the 10th minute, reappeared and started
to increase from the 11th minute and reached 4.4 +/- 0.3 cycles/min d
uring the recovery period (p < 0.05). This study seems to indicate tha
t the phenomenon of protective increase of cutaneous microcirculatory
blood flow consists of an initial phase of vasodilation, followed by a
phase of active and enhanced microvessel vasomotor activity.