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Chronic vibrations constrict vessels.


Many people who work with vibrating vibrating,
v using quivering hand motions made across the client's body for therapeutic purposes.
 power tools develop a syndrome that starts with pain and evolves to include tingling tin·gle  
v. tin·gled, tin·gling, tin·gles

v.intr.
1. To have a prickling, stinging sensation, as from cold, a sharp slap, or excitement: tingled all over with joy.
 or numbness and sensitivity to cold. Researchers at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee think they've discovered a key effect of the vibrations: combined squeezing and twisting of arterial cells to the breaking point.

Sandya Govindaraju and her colleagues worked with rats, in which the tail artery is comparable to the arteries in people's fingers. The researchers vibrated the rodents tails for 5 minutes to 4 hours at 60-hertz frequencies.

During each shaking, the tail artery constricted con·strict  
v. con·strict·ed, con·strict·ing, con·stricts

v.tr.
1. To make smaller or narrower by binding or squeezing.

2. To squeeze or compress.

3.
 to about half its normal capacity. Also, many smooth muscle cells in the vessel's lining began to contort con·tort  
v. con·tort·ed, con·tort·ing, con·torts

v.tr.
To twist, wrench, or bend severely out of shape: pain that contorted their faces.

v.intr.
 and squeeze their contents into a ballooning segment known as a vacuole, explains coauthor Danny Riley. Eventually, he says, only a "gossamer" neck connected a vacuole to its parent cell.

After short periods of vibrations, the vacuole's contents returned to the parent cell. Persistent vibrations, however, risked wrenching the vacuole from its parent, which could kill the cell. Riley, Govindaraju and their coworkers reported their findings in late April at the Experimental Biology meeting in Washington, D.C.

The good news, Govindaraju noted, is that administering a heart drug that limits vasoconstriction vasoconstriction /vaso·con·stric·tion/ (-kon-strik´shun) decrease in the caliber of blood vessels.vasoconstric´tive

va·so·con·stric·tion
n.
 prevented even 4-hour vibration sessions from causing significant vessel tightening or vacuole formation.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Biology
Author:Raloff, Janet
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:May 8, 2004
Words:221
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