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1.
Moon, Jon K., and Nancy F. Butte. Combined heart rateand activity improve estimates of oxygen consumption and carbon dioxideproduction rates. J. Appl. Physiol.81(4): 1754-1761, 1996.Oxygen consumption(O2) andcarbon dioxide production (CO2) rates were measuredby electronically recording heart rate (HR) and physical activity (PA).Mean daily O2 andCO2 measurements by HR andPA were validated in adults (n = 10 women and 10 men) with room calorimeters. Thirteen linear and nonlinear functions of HR alone and HR combined with PA were tested as models of24-h O2 andCO2. Mean sleepO2 andCO2 were similar to basalmetabolic rates and were accurately estimated from HR alone[respective mean errors were 0.2 ± 0.8 (SD) and0.4 ± 0.6%]. The range of prediction errorsfor 24-h O2 andCO2 was smallestfor a model that used PA to assign HR for each minute to separateactive and inactive curves(O2, 3.3 ± 3.5%; CO2, 4.6 ± 3%). There were no significant correlations betweenO2 orCO2 errors and subject age,weight, fat mass, ratio of daily to basal energy expenditure rate, orfitness. O2,CO2, and energy expenditurerecorded for 3 free-living days were 5.6 ± 0.9 ml · min1 · kg1,4.7 ± 0.8 ml · min1 · kg1,and 7.8 ± 1.6 kJ/min, respectively. Combined HR and PA measured 24-h O2 andCO2 with a precisionsimilar to alternative methods.

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2.
Inhibition of carbonic anhydrase (CA) isassociated with a lower plasma lactate concentration([La]pl)during fatiguing exercise. We hypothesized that a lower[La]plmay be associated with faster O2uptake (O2) kinetics during constant-load exercise. Seven men performed cycle ergometer exercise during control (Con) and acute CA inhibition with acetazolamide (Acz,10 mg/kg body wt iv). On 6 separate days, each subject performed 6-minstep transitions in work rate from 0 to 100 W (below ventilatory threshold,<ET)or to a O2 corresponding to~50% of the difference between the work rate atET and peakO2(>ET).Gas exchange was measured breath by breath. Trials were interpolated at1-s intervals and ensemble averaged to yield a single response. The mean response time (MRT, i.e., time to 63% of total exponential increase) for on- and off-transients was determined using a two- (<ET) or athree-component exponential model(>ET).Arterialized venous blood was sampled from a dorsal hand vein andanalyzed for[La]pl.MRT was similar during Con (31.2 ± 2.6 and 32.7 ± 1.2 s for onand off, respectively) and Acz (30.9 ± 3.0 and 31.4 ± 1.5 s for on and off, respectively) for work rates<ET. Atwork rates >ET, MRTwas similar between Con (69.1 ± 6.1 and 50.4 ± 3.5 s for on andoff, respectively) and Acz (69.7 ± 5.9 and 53.8 ± 3.8 s for on and off, respectively). On- and off-MRTs were slower for>ET thanfor <ETexercise.[La]plincreased above 0-W cycling values during<ET and>ET exercise but was lower at the end of the transition during Acz (1.4 ± 0.2 and 7.1 ± 0.5 mmol/l for<ET and>ET,respectively) than during Con (2.0 ± 0.2 and 9.8 ± 0.9 mmol/lfor <ETand >ET,respectively). CA inhibition does not affectO2 utilization at the onset of<ET or>ETexercise, suggesting that the contribution of oxidative phosphorylationto the energy demand is not affected by acute CA inhibition with Acz.

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3.
Dysoxia canbe defined as ATP flux decreasing in proportion toO2 availability with preserved ATPdemand. Hepatic venous -hydroxybutyrate-to-acetoacetate ratio(-OHB/AcAc) estimates liver mitochondrial NADH/NAD and may detectthe onset of dysoxia. During partial dysoxia (as opposed to anoxia),however, flow may be adequate in some liver regions, diluting effluentfrom dysoxic regions, thereby rendering venous -OHB/AcAc unreliable.To address this concern, we estimated tissue ATP whilegradually reducing liver blood flow of swine to zero in a nuclearmagnetic resonance spectrometer. ATP flux decreasing withO2 availability was taken asO2 uptake(O2) decreasing inproportion to O2 delivery(O2);and preserved ATP demand was taken as increasingPi/ATP.O2, tissuePi/ATP, and venous -OHB/AcAcwere plotted againstO2to identify critical inflection points. Tissue dysoxia required meanO2for the group to be critical for bothO2 and forPi/ATP. CriticalO2values for O2 andPi/ATP of 4.07 ± 1.07 and 2.39 ± 1.18 (SE) ml · 100 g1 · min1,respectively, were not statistically significantly different but notclearly the same, suggesting the possibility that dysoxia might havecommenced after O2 begandecreasing, i.e., that there could have been"O2 conformity." CriticalO2for venous -OHB/AcAc was 2.44 ± 0.46 ml · 100 g1 · min1(P = NS), nearly the same as that forPi/ATP, supporting venous -OHB/AcAc as a detector of dysoxia. All issues considered, tissue mitochondrial redox state seems to be an appropriate detector ofdysoxia in liver.

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4.
We examined the hypothesis that glucose flux wasdirectly related to relative exercise intensity both beforeand after a 12-wk cycle ergometer training program [5days/wk, 1-h duration, 75% peakO2 consumption(O2 peak)] inhealthy female subjects (n = 17; age23.8 ± 2.0 yr). Two pretraining trials (45 and 65% of O2 peak)and two posttraining trials [same absolute workload (65% of oldO2 peak)and same relative workload (65% of new O2 peak)] wereperformed on nine subjects by using a primed-continuous infusion of[1-13C]- and[6,6-2H]glucose.Eight additional subjects were studied by using[6,6-2H]glucose.Subjects were studied postabsorption for 90 min of rest and 1 h ofcycling exercise. After training, subjects increased O2 peak by 25.2 ± 2.4%. Pretraining, the intensity effect on glucose kinetics wasevident between 45 and 65% ofO2 peak with rates ofappearance (Ra: 4.52 ± 0.25 vs. 5.53 ± 0.33 mg · kg1 · min1),disappearance (Rd: 4.46 ± 0.25 vs. 5.54 ± 0.33 mg · kg1 · min1),and oxidation (Rox: 2.45 ± 0.16 vs. 4.35 ± 0.26 mg · kg1 · min1)of glucose being significantly greater(P  0.05) in the 65% thanin the 45% trial. Training reducedRa (4.7 ± 0.30 mg · kg1 · min1),Rd (4.69 ± 0.20 mg · kg1 · min1),and Rox (3.54 ± 0.50 mg · kg1 · min1)at the same absolute workload (P  0.05). When subjects were tested at the same relative workload,Ra,Rd, andRox were not significantlydifferent after training. However, at both workloads after training,there was a significant decrease in total carbohydrate oxidation asdetermined by the respiratory exchange ratio. These results show thefollowing in young women: 1)glucose use is directly related to exercise intensity;2) training decreasesglucose flux for a given power output;3) when expressed asrelative exercise intensity, training does not affect the magnitude ofblood glucose flux during exercise; but4) training does reduce totalcarbohydrate oxidation.

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5.
Fitzgerald, Margaret D., Hirofumi Tanaka, Zung V. Tran, andDouglas R. Seals. Age-related declines in maximal aerobic capacityin regularly exercising vs. sedentary women: a meta-analysis. J. Appl. Physiol. 83(1): 160-165, 1997.Our purpose was to determine the relationship between habitualaerobic exercise status and the rate of decline in maximal aerobiccapacity across the adult age range in women. A meta-analytic approachwas used in which mean maximal oxygen consumption(O2 max) values fromfemale subject groups (ages 18-89 yr) were obtained from thepublished literature. A total of 239 subject groups from 109 studiesinvolving 4,884 subjects met the inclusion criteria and werearbitrarily separated into sedentary (groups = 107; subjects = 2,256),active (groups = 69; subjects = 1,717), and endurance-trained (groups = 63; subjects = 911) populations.O2 max averaged 29.7 ± 7.8, 38.7 ± 9.2, and 52.0 ± 10.5 ml · kg1 · min1,respectively, and was inversely related to age within each population (r = 0.82 to 0.87, allP < 0.0001). The rate of decline inO2 max withincreasing subject group age was lowest in sedentary women (3.5ml · kg1 · min1· decade1), greater inactive women (4.4ml · kg1 · min1· decade1), andgreatest in endurance-trained women (6.2ml · kg1 · min1 · decade1)(all P < 0.001 vs. each other). Whenexpressed as percent decrease from mean levels at age ~25 yr, therates of decline inO2 max were similarin the three populations (10.0 to 10.9%/decade). Therewas no obvious relationship between aerobic exercise status and therate of decline in maximal heart rate with age. The results of thiscross-sectional study support the hypothesis that, in contrast to theprevailing view, the rate of decline in maximal aerobic capacity withage is greater, not smaller, in endurance-trained vs. sedentary women.The greater rate of decline inO2 max in endurance-trained populations may be related to their higher values asyoung adults (baseline effect) and/or to greater age-related reductions in exercise volume; however, it does not appear to berelated to a greater rate of decline in maximal heart rate with age.

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6.
To test thehypothesis that muscle O2 uptake(O2) on-kinetics islimited, at least in part, by peripheralO2 diffusion, we determined theO2 on-kinetics in1) normoxia (Control);2) hyperoxic gas breathing(Hyperoxia); and 3) hyperoxia andthe administration of a drug (RSR-13, Allos Therapeutics), whichright-shifts the Hb-O2dissociation curve (Hyperoxia+RSR-13). The study was conducted inisolated canine gastrocnemius muscles(n = 5) during transitions from restto 3 min of electrically stimulated isometric tetanic contractions(200-ms trains, 50 Hz; 1 contraction/2 s; 60-70% peakO2). In all conditions,before and during contractions, muscle was pump perfused withconstantly elevated blood flow (), at a levelmeasured at steady state during contractions in preliminary trials withspontaneous . Adenosine was infusedintra-arterially to prevent inordinate pressure increases with theelevated . was measuredcontinuously, arterial and popliteal venousO2 concentrations were determinedat rest and at 5- to 7-s intervals during contractions, andO2 was calculated as · arteriovenous O2 content difference.PO2 at 50%HbO2saturation (P50) was calculated.Mean capillary PO2(cO2)was estimated by numerical integration.P50 was higher in Hyperoxia+RSR-13[40 ± 1 (SE) Torr] than in Control and in Hyperoxia (31 ± 1 Torr). After 15 s of contractions,cO2was higher in Hyperoxia (97 ± 9 Torr) vs. Control (53 ± 3 Torr) and in Hyperoxia+RSR-13 (197 ± 39 Torr) vs. Hyperoxia. Thetime to reach 63% of the difference between baseline and steady-stateO2 during contractions was 24.7 ± 2.7 s in Control, 26.3 ± 0.8 s in Hyperoxia, and 24.7 ± 1.1 s in Hyperoxia+RSR-13 (not significant). Enhancement ofperipheral O2 diffusion (obtainedby increasedcO2at constant O2 delivery) duringthe rest-to-contraction (60-70% of peakO2) transition did notaffect muscle O2on-kinetics.

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7.
Training-induced alterations of glucose flux in men   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Friedlander, Anne L., Gretchen A. Casazza, Michael A. Horning, Melvin J. Huie, and George A. Brooks. Training-induced alterations of glucose flux in men. J. Appl.Physiol. 82(4): 1360-1369, 1997.We examined thehypothesis that glucose flux was directly related to relative exerciseintensity both before and after a 10-wk cycle ergometer trainingprogram in 19 healthy male subjects. Two pretraining trials [45and 65% of peak O2 consumption(O2 peak)] andtwo posttraining trials (same absolute and relative intensities as 65%pretraining) were performed for 90 min of rest and 1 h of cyclingexercise. After training, subjects increasedO2 peak by9.4 ± 1.4%. Pretraining, the intensity effect on glucose kinetics was evident with rates of appearance(Ra; 5.84 ± 0.23 vs. 4.73 ± 0.19 mg · kg1 · min1),disappearance (Rd; 5.78 ± 0.19 vs. 4.73 ± 0.19 mg · kg1 · min1),oxidation (Rox; 5.36 ± 0.15 vs. 3.41 ± 0.23 mg · kg1 · min1),and metabolic clearance (7.03 ± 0.56 vs. 5.20 ± 0.28 ml · kg1 · min1)of glucose being significantly greater(P  0.05) in the 65% than the 45%O2 peak trial. WhenRd was expressed as a percentage of total energy expended per minute(Rd E), there was nodifference between the 45 and 65% intensities. Training did reduceRa (4.63 ± 0.25),Rd (4.65 ± 0.24),Rox (3.77 ± 0.43), andRd E (15.30 ± 0.40 to12.85 ± 0.81) when subjects were tested at the same absolute workload (P  0.05). However, whenthey were tested at the same relative workload,Ra,Rd, andRd E were not different,although Rox was lowerposttraining (5.36 ± 0.15 vs. 4.41 ± 0.42, P  0.05). These results show1) glucose use is directly relatedto exercise intensity; 2) trainingdecreases glucose flux for a given power output;3) when expressed as relativeexercise intensity, training does not affect the magnitude of bloodglucose use during exercise; 4)training alters the pathways of glucose disposal.

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8.
Gonzalez, Norberto C., Richard L. Clancy, Yoshihiro Moue,and Jean-Paul Richalet. Increasing maximal heart rate increases maximal O2 uptake in ratsacclimatized to simulated altitude. J. Appl.Physiol. 84(1): 164-168, 1998.Maximal exerciseheart rate (HRmax) is reducedafter acclimatization to hypobaric hypoxia. The lowHRmax contributes to reducemaximal cardiac output(max) andmay limit maximal O2 uptake(O2 max). Theobjective of these experiments was to test the hypothesisthat the reduction inmax afteracclimatization to hypoxia, due, in part, to the lowHRmax, limitsO2 max. Ifthis hypothesis is correct, an increase in max wouldresult in a proportionate increase inO2 max. Rats acclimatized to hypobaric hypoxia [inspiredPO2(PIO2) = 69.8 ± 3 Torr for 3 wk] exercised on a treadmill in hypoxic (PIO2 = 71.7 ± 1.1 Torr) or normoxic conditions(PIO2 = 142.1 ± 1.1 Torr). Each rat ran twice: in one bout the rat was allowed to reach itsspontaneous HRmax, which was 505 ± 7 and 501 ± 5 beats/min in hypoxic and normoxic exercise,respectively; in the other exercise bout,HRmax was increased by 20% to the preacclimatization value of 600 beats/min by atrial pacing. This resulted in an ~10% increase inmax, since theincrease in HRmax was offset by a10% decrease in stroke volume, probably due to shortening of diastolicfilling time. The increase inmax was accompanied by a proportionate increase in maximal rate of convective O2 delivery(max × arterial O2 content), maximal workrate, and O2 max inhypoxic and normoxic exercise. The data show that increasingHRmax topreacclimatization levels increasesO2 max, supportingthe hypothesis that the lowHRmax tends to limitO2 max after acclimatization to hypoxia.

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9.
Tantucci, C., P. Bottini, M. L. Dottorini, E. Puxeddu, G. Casucci, L. Scionti, and C. A. Sorbini. Ventilatory response toexercise in diabetic subjects with autonomic neuropathy.J. Appl. Physiol. 81(5):1978-1986, 1996.We have used diabetic autonomic neuropathy as amodel of chronic pulmonary denervation to study the ventilatoryresponse to incremental exercise in 20 diabetic subjects, 10 with(Dan+) and 10 without (Dan) autonomic dysfunction, and in 10 normal control subjects. Although both Dan+ and Dan subjectsachieved lower O2 consumption andCO2 production(CO2) thancontrol subjects at peak of exercise, they attained similar values ofeither minute ventilation(E) oradjusted ventilation (E/maximalvoluntary ventilation). The increment of respiratory rate withincreasing adjusted ventilation was much higher in Dan+ than inDan and control subjects (P < 0.05). The slope of the linearE/CO2relationship was 0.032 ± 0.002, 0.027 ± 0.001 (P < 0.05), and 0.025 ± 0.001 (P < 0.001) ml/min inDan+, Dan, and control subjects, respectively. Bothneuromuscular and ventilatory outputs in relation to increasingCO2 were progressivelyhigher in Dan+ than in Dan and control subjects. At peak ofexercise, end-tidal PCO2 was muchlower in Dan+ (35.9 ± 1.6 Torr) than in Dan (42.1 ± 1.7 Torr; P < 0.02) and control (42.1 ± 0.9 Torr; P < 0.005) subjects.We conclude that pulmonary autonomic denervation affects ventilatoryresponse to stressful exercise by excessively increasing respiratoryrate and alveolar ventilation. Reduced neural inhibitory modulationfrom sympathetic pulmonary afferents and/or increasedchemosensitivity may be responsible for the higher inspiratoryoutput.

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10.
To simulate theimmediate hemodynamic effect of negative intrathoracic pressure duringobstructive apneas in congestive heart failure (CHF), without inducingconfounding factors such as hypoxia and arousals from sleep, eightawake patients performed, at random, 15-s Mueller maneuvers (MM) attarget intrathoracic pressures of 20 (MM 20) and40 cmH2O (MM 40),confirmed by esophageal pressure, and 15-s breath holds, as apneic timecontrols. Compared with quiet breathing, at baseline, before theseinterventions, the immediate effects [first 5 cardiac cycles(SD), P values refer to MM 40compared with breath holds] of apnea, MM 20, and MM 40 were, for left ventricular (LV) systolic transmural pressure (Ptm), 1.0 ± 1.9, 7.2 ± 3.5, and 11.3 ± 6.8 mmHg(P < 0.01); for systolic bloodpressure (SBP), 2.9 ± 2.6, 5.5 ± 3.4, and 12.1 ± 6.8 mmHg (P < 0.01); and forstroke volume (SV) index, 0.4 ± 2.8, 4.1 ± 2.8, and6.9 ± 2.3 ml/m2(P < 0.001), respectively.Corresponding values over the last five cardiac cycles were for LVPtm6.4 ± 4.4, 5.4 ± 6.6, and 4.5 ± 9.1 mmHg (P < 0.01); for SBP6.9 ± 4.2, 8.2 ± 7.7, and 24.2 ± 6.9 mmHg (P < 0.01); and for SVindex 0.4 ± 2.1, 5.2 ± 2.8, and 9.2 ± 4.8 ml/m2(P < 0.001), respectively.Thus, in CHF patients, the initial hemodynamic response to thegeneration of negative intrathoracic pressure includes an immediateincrease in LV afterload and an abrupt fall in SV. The magnitude ofresponse is proportional to the intensity of the MM stimulus. By theend of a 15-s MM 40, LVPtm falls below baseline values, yet SVand SBP do not recover. Thus, when 40cmH2O intrathoracic pressure issustained, additional mechanisms, such as a drop in LV preload due toventricular interaction, are engaged, further reducing SV. The neteffect of MM 40 was a 33% reduction in SV index (from 27 to 18 ml/min2), and a 21% reductionin SBP (from 121 to 96 mmHg). Obstructive apneas can have adverseeffects on systemic and, possibly, coronary perfusion in CHF throughdynamic mechanisms that are both stimulus and timedependent.

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11.
Respiratory muscle work compromises leg blood flow during maximal exercise   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Harms, Craig A., Mark A. Babcock, Steven R. McClaran, DavidF. Pegelow, Glenn A. Nickele, William B. Nelson, and Jerome A. Dempsey.Respiratory muscle work compromises leg blood flow during maximalexercise. J. Appl. Physiol.82(5): 1573-1583, 1997.We hypothesized that duringexercise at maximal O2 consumption (O2 max),high demand for respiratory muscle blood flow() would elicit locomotor muscle vasoconstrictionand compromise limb . Seven male cyclists(O2 max 64 ± 6 ml · kg1 · min1)each completed 14 exercise bouts of 2.5-min duration atO2 max on a cycleergometer during two testing sessions. Inspiratory muscle work waseither 1) reduced via aproportional-assist ventilator, 2)increased via graded resistive loads, or3) was not manipulated (control).Arterial (brachial) and venous (femoral) blood samples, arterial bloodpressure, leg (legs;thermodilution), esophageal pressure, andO2 consumption(O2) weremeasured. Within each subject and across all subjects, at constantmaximal work rate, significant correlations existed(r = 0.74-0.90;P < 0.05) between work of breathing(Wb) and legs (inverse), leg vascular resistance (LVR), and leg O2(O2 legs;inverse), and between LVR and norepinephrine spillover. Mean arterialpressure did not change with changes in Wb nor did tidal volume orminute ventilation. For a ±50% change from control in Wb,legs changed 2 l/min or 11% of control, LVRchanged 13% of control, and O2extraction did not change; thusO2 legschanged 0.4 l/min or 10% of control. TotalO2 max was unchangedwith loading but fell 9.3% with unloading; thusO2 legsas a percentage of totalO2 max was 81% incontrol, increased to 89% with respiratory muscle unloading, anddecreased to 71% with respiratory muscle loading. We conclude that Wbnormally incurred during maximal exercise causes vasoconstriction inlocomotor muscles and compromises locomotor muscle perfusion andO2.

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12.
Dogs of mixedbreed (n = 7) were anesthetized, rightlung atelectasis was established, and the cyclooxygenase pathway was blocked with ibuprofen. Measurements of pulmonary gas exchange wereperformed (fractional concentration of inspiredO2 = 0.95) after infusions ofprostaglandin F2(PGF2; 2 µg · kg1 · min1),ventilation with nitric oxide (NO; 40 ppm), or both(PGF2 + NO) in random order.The arterial PO2(PaO2) under control conditions was 117 ± 16 Torr (shunt = 33 ± 2.5%), was unchanged with NO alone(PaO2 = 114 ± 17 Torr; shunt = 35.7 ± 3.1%), but was significantlyimproved with PGF2 alone(PaO2 = 180 ± 28 Torr; shunt = 23.2 ± 2.8%) and with the combination ofPGF2 + NO(PaO2 = 202 ± 30 Torr; shunt = 20.9 ± 2.5%). The addition of NO didnot significantly enhance the effectiveness of thePGF2 onPaO2.Simulation of these data in a computer model, combining pulmonary gasexchange and pulmonary blood flow, reproduced the results on the basisthat vasoconstriction with PGF2was maximal under hypoxia in the atelectatic lung and reduced byhyperoxia in the ventilated lung, consistent with the hypothesis ofO2 dependence ofPGF2 vasoconstriction.

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13.
The mechanism(s)limiting muscle O2 uptake(O2) kinetics wasinvestigated in isolated canine gastrocnemius muscles(n = 7) during transitions from restto 3 min of electrically stimulated isometric tetanic contractions(200-ms trains, 50 Hz; 1 contraction/2 s; 60-70% of peakO2). Two conditions weremainly compared: 1) spontaneousadjustment of blood flow () [control, spontaneous (C Spont)]; and2) pump-perfused, adjusted ~15 s before contractions at aconstant level corresponding to the steady-state value duringcontractions in C Spont [faster adjustment ofO2 delivery (FastO2 Delivery)]. During FastO2 Delivery, 1-2 ml/min of102 M adenosine wereinfused intra-arterially to prevent inordinate pressure increases withthe elevated . The purpose of the study was todetermine whether a faster adjustment ofO2 delivery would affectO2 kinetics. was measured continuously; arterial(CaO2) and popliteal venous(CvO2)O2 contents were determined atrest and at 5- to 7-s intervals during contractions;O2 delivery was calculated as · CaO2,and O2 was calculated as · arteriovenous O2 content difference. Times toreach 63% of the difference between baseline and steady-stateO2 during contractions were23.8 ± 2.0 (SE) s in C Spont and 21.8 ± 0.9 s in FastO2 Delivery (not significant). Inthe present experimental model, elimination of any delay inO2 delivery during therest-to-contraction transition did not affect muscleO2 kinetics, which suggeststhat this kinetics was mainly set by an intrinsic inertia of oxidativemetabolism.

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14.
Short, Kevin R., and Darlene A. Sedlock. Excesspostexercise oxygen consumption and recovery rate in trained anduntrained subjects. J. Appl. Physiol.83(1): 153-159, 1997.The purpose of this study was todetermine whether aerobic fitness level would influence measurements ofexcess postexercise oxygen consumption (EPOC) and initial rate ofrecovery. Twelve trained [Tr; peak oxygen consumption(O2 peak) = 53.3 ± 6.4 ml · kg1 · min1]and ten untrained (UT;O2 peak = 37.4 ± 3.2 ml · kg1 · min1)subjects completed two 30-min cycle ergometer tests on separate days inthe morning, after a 12-h fast and an abstinence from vigorous activityof 24 h. Baseline metabolic rate was established during the last 10 minof a 30-min seated preexercise rest period. Exercise workloads weremanipulated so that they elicited the same relative, 70%O2 peak (W70%), orthe same absolute, 1.5 l/min oxygen uptake(O2) (W1.5), intensity forall subjects, respectively. RecoveryO2, heart rate (HR), andrespiratory exchange ratio (RER) were monitored in a seated positionuntil baseline O2 wasreestablished. Under both exercise conditions, Tr had shorter EPOCduration (W70% = 40 ± 15 min, W1.5 = 21 ± 9 min) than UT(W70% = 50 ± 14 min; W1.5 = 39 ± 14 min), but EPOC magnitude(Tr: W70% = 3.2 ± 1.0 litersO2, W1.5 = 1.5 ± 0.6 liters O2; UT: W70% = 3.5 ± 0.9 liters O2, W1.5 = 2.4 ± 0.6 liters O2) was not different between groups. The similarity of Tr and UT EPOCaccumulation in the W70% trial is attributed to the parallel declinein absolute O2 during mostof the initial recovery period. Tr subjects had faster relative declineduring the fast-recovery phase, however, when a correction for theirhigher exerciseO2 was taken.Postexercise O2 was lowerfor Tr group for nearly all of the W1.5 trial and particularly duringthe fast phase. Recovery HR kinetics were remarkably similar for bothgroups in W70%, but recovery was faster for Tr during W1.5. RER valueswere at or below baseline throughout much of the recovery period in both groups, with UT experiencing larger changes than Tr in both trials. These findings indicate that Tr individuals have faster regulation of postexercise metabolism when exercising at either thesame relative or same absolute work rate.

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15.
Langsetmo, I., G. E. Weigle, M. R. Fedde, H. H. Erickson, T. J. Barstow, and D. C. Poole.O2 kinetics in thehorse during moderate and heavy exercise. J. Appl.Physiol. 83(4): 1235-1241, 1997.The horse is asuperb athlete, achieving a maximalO2 uptake (~160ml · min1 · kg1)approaching twice that of the fittest humans. Although equine O2 uptake(O2) kinetics arereportedly fast, they have not been precisely characterized, nor hastheir exercise intensity dependence been elucidated. To addressthese issues, adult male horses underwent incremental treadmill testingto determine their lactate threshold (Tlac) and peakO2(O2 peak),and kinetic features of their O2 response to"square-wave" work forcings were resolved using exercisetransitions from 3 m/s to abelow-Tlac speed of 7 m/s or anabove-Tlac speed of 12.3 ± 0.7 m/s (i.e., between Tlac and O2 peak) sustainedfor 6 min. O2 andCO2 output were measured using anopen-flow system: pulmonary artery temperature was monitored, and mixedvenous blood was sampled for plasma lactate.O2 kinetics at work levelsbelow Tlac were well fit by atwo-phase exponential model, with a phase2 time constant(1 = 10.0 ± 0.9 s) thatfollowed a time delay (TD1 = 18.9 ± 1.9 s). TD1 was similar tothat found in humans performing leg cycling exercise, but the timeconstant was substantially faster. For speeds aboveTlac,TD1 was unchanged (20.3 ± 1.2 s); however, the phase 2 time constantwas significantly slower (1 = 20.7 ± 3.4 s, P < 0.05) than for exercise belowTlac. Furthermore, in four of fivehorses, a secondary, delayed increase inO2 became evident135.7 ± 28.5 s after the exercise transition. This "slowcomponent" accounted for ~12% (5.8 ± 2.7 l/min) of the netincrease in exercise O2. Weconclude that, at exercise intensities below and aboveTlac, qualitative features ofO2 kinetics in the horseare similar to those in humans. However, at speeds belowTlac the fast component of theresponse is more rapid than that reported for humans, likely reflectingdifferent energetics of O2utilization within equine muscle fibers.

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16.
Pulmonary blood flow redistribution by increased gravitational force   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
This study was undertaken to assess theinfluence of gravity on the distribution of pulmonary blood flow (PBF)using increased inertial force as a perturbation. PBF was studied inunanesthetized swine exposed toGx (dorsal-to-ventraldirection, prone position), where G is the magnitude of the force ofgravity at the surface of the Earth, on the Armstrong LaboratoryCentrifuge at Brooks Air Force Base. PBF was measured using 15-µmfluorescent microspheres, a method with markedly enhanced spatialresolution. Each animal was exposed randomly to 1, 2, and3 Gx. Pulmonary vascularpressures, cardiac output, heart rate, arterial blood gases, and PBFdistribution were measured at each G level. Heterogeneity of PBFdistribution as measured by the coefficient of variation of PBFdistribution increased from 0.38 ± 0.05 to 0.55 ± 0.11 to0.72 ± 0.16 at 1, 2, and 3Gx, respectively. At 1Gx, PBF was greatest in theventral and cranial and lowest in the dorsal and caudal regions of thelung. With increased Gx,this gradient was augmented in both directions. Extrapolation of thesevalues to 0 G predicts a slight dorsal (nondependent) region dominanceof PBF and a coefficient of variation of 0.22 in microgravity. Analysisof variance revealed that a fixed component (vascular structure)accounted for 81% and nonstructure components (including gravity)accounted for the remaining 19% of the PBF variance across the entireexperiment (all 3 gravitational levels). The results are inconsistentwith the predictions of the zone model.

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17.
The accumulation ofvisceral fat is independently associated with an increased risk forcardiovascular disease. The aim of this study was to determine whetherthe loss of visceral adipose tissue area (VAT; computed tomography) isrelated to improvements in maximal O2 uptake(O2 max) during a weight loss(250-350 kcal/day deficit) and walking (3 days/wk, 30-40 min)intervention. Forty obese [body fat 47 ± 1 (SE) %], sedentary(O2 max 19 ± 1 ml · kg1 · min1)postmenopausal women (age 62 ± 1 yr) participated in the study. The intervention resulted in significant declines in body weight (8%), total fat mass (dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry; 17%), VAT(17%), and subcutaneous adipose tissue area (17%) with no changein lean body mass (all P < 0.001). Women with anaverage 10% increase in O2 max reducedVAT by an average of 20%, whereas those who did not increaseO2 max decreased VAT by only 10%,despite comparable reductions in body fat, fat mass, and subcutaneousadipose tissue area. The decrease in VAT was independently related tothe change in O2 max(r2 = 0.22; P < 0.01) andfat mass (r2 = 0.08; P = 0.05). These data indicate that greater improvements inO2 max with weight loss and walking areassociated with greater reductions in visceral adiposity in obesepostmenopausal women.

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18.
George, Kelley. Dynamic resistance exercise and restingblood pressure in adults: a meta-analysis. J. Appl.Physiol. 82(5): 1559-1565, 1997.With the use ofthe meta-analytic approach, the purpose of this study was to examinethe effects of dynamic resistance exercise, i.e., weight training, onresting systolic and diastolic blood pressure in adults. A total ofnine studies consisting of 259 subjects (144 exercise, 115 control) and18 groups (9 exercise, 9 control) were included in this analysis. Withthe use of the bootstrap technique (10,000 samples), significant treatment effect(3)reductions were found across all designs and categories for bothsystolic and diastolic blood pressure [systolic, mean ± SD = 4.55 ± 1.75 mmHg, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.56 to 8.56; diastolic, mean ± SD = 3.79 + 1.12 mmHg, 95% confidence interval CI = 1.89 to6.33]. 3 changescorresponded with relative decreases of ~3 and 4% in restingsystolic and diastolic blood pressure, respectively. Inconclusion, meta-analytic review of included studies suggests thatdynamic resistance exercise reduces resting systolic and diastolicblood pressure in adults. However, it is premature to form strongconclusions regarding the effects of dynamic resistance exercise onresting blood pressure. A need exists for additional, well-designedstudies on this topic before a recommendation can be made regarding theefficacy of dynamic resistance exercise as a nonpharmacological therapyfor reducing resting blood pressure in adults, especially inhypertensive adults.

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19.
The redistributionof blood flow (BF) in the abdominal viscera during right-legged kneeextension-flexion exercise at very low intensity [peak heart rate(HR), 76 beats/min] was examined by using Doppler ultrasound.While sitting, subjects performed a right-legged knee extension-flexionexercise every 6 s for 20 min. BF was measured in the upper abdominalaorta (Ao), right common femoral artery (RCFA), and left common femoralartery (LCFA). Visceral BF(BFVis) was determined by theequation [BFAo  (BFRCFA + BFLCFA)]. A comparisonwith the change in BF (BF) preexercise showed a greater increase inBFRCFA than inBFAo during exercise. Thisresulted in a reduction of BFVisto 56% of its preexercise value or a decrease in flow by 1,147 ± 293 (±SE) ml/min at the peak workload. Oxygen consumptioncorrelated positively withBFAo, BFRCFA, andBFLCFA but inversely withBFVis during exercise andrecovery. Furthermore, BFVis (% of preexercise value) correlated inversely with both an increase in HR(r = 0.89), and percent peakoxygen consumption (r = 0.99).This study demonstrated that, even during very-low-intensity exercise(HR <90 beats/min), there was a significant shift in BF from theviscera to the exercising muscles.  相似文献   

20.
Oxygen transport in conscious newborn dogs during hypoxic hypometabolism   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We questioned whether the decrease inO2 consumption(O2) during hypoxia innewborns is a regulated response or reflects a limitation inO2 availability. Experiments wereconducted on previously instrumented conscious newborn dogs.O2 was measured at a warmambient temperature (30°C, n = 7)or in the cold (20°C, n = 6),while the animals breathed air or were sequentially exposed to 15 minof fractional inspired O2(FIO2): 21, 18, 15, 12, 10, 8, and 6%. In normoxia,O2 averaged 15 ± 1 (SE)and 25 ± 1 ml · kg1 · min1in warm and cold conditions, respectively. In the warmcondition, hypometabolism (i.e., hypoxicO2 < normoxicO2) occurred at FIO2 10%, whereas in thecold condition, hypometabolism occurred atFIO2 12%. The sameresults were obtained in a separate group(n = 14) of noninstrumented puppies.For all levels of FIO2 withhypometabolism, the relationships between measures ofO2 availability (arterialO2 saturation or content, venousPO2 or saturation,x-axis) vs.O2(y-axis) had lower slopes in warm than in coldconditions. Hence, O2 during hypometabolism in the warm condition was not the maximal attainable for the level of oxygenation. The results do not support thepossibility that the hypoxic drop inO2 in the newborn reflects a limitation in O2availability. The results are compatible with the ideathat the phenomenon is one of "regulated conformism" tohypoxia.

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