Abstract
Previous studies demonstrated that naftidrofuryl increased the cutaneous and intramuscular tissue pO2 at rest. The presented open prospective pilot study is to investigate in apparently healthy subjects (n=12) whether naftidrofuryl also affects pO2 in situations of muscular stress. The pO2 is measured with a flexible probe in the anterior tibial muscle during treadmill exercise prior to and after one‐week treatment with 100 mg of naftidrofuryl administered three times a day.
The intake of naftidrofuryl proved to significantly affect the intramuscular partial oxygen pressure. With 38.6±22.9 mmHg, the pO2 is at rest already significantly (p<0.05), i.e., approx. 40% higher after one week of intake than before treatment (27.3±12.1 mmHg). This higher pO2 level is maintained during exercise. The higher the physical load, the larger the difference in pO2. While under naftidrofuryl treatment the measured pO2 values exhibit the tendency to increase during the first exercise phase (at a load of 3 km/h and a gradient 5 degree), the differences are even significant under higher physical stress (at 5 km/h and a gradient of 10 degree). With 33.9±12.0 mmHg the mean minimum pO2 determined at the higher load level still ranges above the basal pO2 measured before the start of naftidrofuryl treatment.
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