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1.
The purpose of this study was to measure the changes and rates of adaptation of left ventricular volumes at the onset of exercise. Eight asymptomatic subjects, in whom intramyocardial markers had been implanted 3-6 years previously during aortocoronary bypass surgery, exercised in the supine position at a constant workload of 73.6 W for 5 min. Six also exercised first at 16.4 W, and then against a workload which progressively increased by 8.2 W every 15 s. Cardiac volumes were measured by computer assisted analysis of the motion of the implanted markers. In the constant workload test, cardiac output increased rapidly from 5.7 +/- 1 min-1 to 10.3 +/- 1.9 1 min-1 by 2 min and then increased more slowly to 10.8 +/- 2.0 1 min-1 by 5 min. The cardiac output increase was mainly due to an increase in heart rate from 68 +/- 12 beats min-1 to 120 +/- 16 beats min-1 with minimal changes in stroke volume. The time constant for the early increase in cardiac output was 45s and for heart rate, 35s. With progressively increasing workloads, there was an almost linear increase of heart rate and cardiac output, but these increased at a slower rate than during the early phase of the constant load exercise test. In conclusion: rapid changes in cardiac output during supine exercise were produced by changes in heart rate; changes in stroke volume provided minor adjustments to cardiac output; the end-diastolic volume was almost constant.  相似文献   

2.
To find out whether endurance training influences the kinetics of the increases in heart rate (fc) during exercise driven by the sympathetic nervous system, the changes in the rate of fc adjustment to step increments in exercise intensities from 100 to 150 W were followed in seven healthy, previously sedentary men, subjected to 10-week training. The training programme consisted of 30-min cycle exercise at 50%-70% of maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max) three times a week. Every week during the first 5 weeks of training, and then after the 10th week the subjects underwent the submaximal three-stage exercise test (50, 100 and 150 W) with continuous fc recording. At the completion of the training programme, the subjects' VO2max had increased significantly (39.2 ml.min-1.kg-1, SD 4.7 vs 46 ml.min-1.kg-1, SD 5.6) and the steady-state fc at rest and at all submaximal intensities were significantly reduced. The greatest decrease in steady-state fc was found at 150 W (146 beats.min-1, SD 10 vs 169 beats.min-1, SD 9) but the difference between the steady-state fc at 150 W and that at 100 W (delta fc) did not decrease significantly (26 beats.min-1, SD 7 vs 32 beats.min-1, SD 6). The time constant (tau) of the fc increase from the steady-state at 100 W to steady-state at 150 W increased during training from 99.4 s, SD 6.6 to 123.7 s, SD 22.7 (P less than 0.01) and the acceleration index (A = 0.63.delta fc.tau-1) decreased from 0.20 beats.min-1.s-1, SD 0.05 to 0.14 beats.min-1.s-1, SD 0.04 (P less than 0.02). The major part of the changes in tau and A occurred during the first 4 weeks of training. It was concluded that heart acceleration following incremental exercise intensities slowed down in the early phase of endurance training, most probably due to diminished sympathetic activation.  相似文献   

3.
The transient and steady-state cardiopulmonary responses to combined rhythmic (R) and isometric (I) exercise were examined in nine subjects. Isometric exercise at 30% maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) was started 1.5 min prior to either a 50% or 75% maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max) cycle ride and continued for 1.5 min into the 10-min R. Systolic (Pas) and diastolic (P(ad)) blood pressure, heart rate (fc), inspired ventilation volumes (VI), and oxygen uptake (VO2) were recorded every 30 s throughout each experiment. Responses to I effort alone were recorded for comparison with experiments in which the combined exercises were performed during the first 1.5 min when R had not yet begun. Pas responses in the first 1.5 min of I (no R) showed the typical rapid linear increase. Addition of the R effort further increased Pas to levels which remained nearly constant (steady state) throughout R. R alone produced a slower Pas increase to approximately the same steady-state levels as those of the combined R and I exercise. For P(ad), the linear increase which occurred during the first 1.5 min of I was attenuated with the superimposition of R. Following cessation of I, P(ad) fell rapidly during continued R to levels not different from experiments with R alone. The fc during I alone increased slightly. As I continued, the onset of the R induced a further rapid increase in fc to levels not different from R alone. The VI showed a similar response to fc. VO2 during I alone did not change significantly.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
To quantify the effect of an acute increase in plasma volume (PV) on forearm blood flow (FBF), heart rate (HR), and esophageal temperature (Tes) during exercise, we studied six male volunteers who exercised on a cycle ergometer at 60% of maximal aerobic power for 50 min in a warm [(W), 30 degrees C, less than 30% relative humidity (rh)] or cool environment [(C), 22 degrees C, less than 30% rh] with isotonic saline infusion [Inf(+)] or without infusion [Inf(-)]. The infusion was performed at a constant rate of 0.29 ml.kg body wt-1.min-1 for 20-50 min of exercise to mimic fluid intake during exercise. PV decreased by approximately 5 ml/kg body wt within the first 10 min of exercise in all protocols. Therefore, PV in Inf(-) was maintained at the same reduced level by 50 min of exercise in both ambient temperatures, whereas PV in Inf(+) increased toward the preexercise level and recovered approximately 4.5 ml/kg body wt by 50 min in both temperatures. The restoration of PV during exercise suppressed the HR increase by 6 beats/min at 50 min of exercise in W; however, infusion had no effect on HR in C. In W, FBF in Inf(+) continued to increase linearly as Tes rose to 38.1 degrees C by the end of exercise, whereas FBF in Inf(-) plateaued when Tes reached approximately 37.7 degrees C. The infusion in C had only a minor effect on FBF.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The purpose of this study was to identify the pattern of change in the density of activated sweat glands (ASG) and sweat output per gland (SGO) during dynamic constant-workload exercise and passive heat stress. Eight male subjects (22.8 +/- 0.9 yr) exercised at a constant workload (117.5 +/- 4.8 W) and were also passively heated by lower-leg immersion into hot water of 42 degrees C under an ambient temperature of 25 degrees C and relative humidity of 50%. Esophageal temperature, mean skin temperature, sweating rate (SR), and heart rate were measured continuously during both trials. The number of ASG was determined every 4 min after the onset of sweating, whereas SGO was calculated by dividing SR by ASG. During both exercise and passive heating, SR increased abruptly during the first 8 min after onset of sweating, followed by a slower increase. Similarly for both protocols, the number of ASG increased rapidly during the first 8 min after the onset of sweating and then ceased to increase further (P > 0.05). Conversely, SGO increased linearly throughout both perturbations. Our results suggest that changes in forearm sweating rate rely on both ASG and SGO during the initial period of exercise and passive heating, whereas further increases in SR are dependent on increases in SGO.  相似文献   

6.
The aim of this study was to determine the effect of controlled hypotension on subcutaneous and cutaneous haemodynamics in humans. Moderate hypotension was achieved with nitroglycerin (NTG) and sodium nitroprusside (SNP) infusion during narconeuroleptanalgesia in seven patients. Subcutaneous and cutaneous blood flow were measured by a superficial and deep heat clearance (HC) technique. The mean arterial pressure (BPa) decreased by 23%-30% and heart rate (fc) increased but only during NTG infusion (+22%; P less than 0.02). Subcutaneous and cutaneous blood flows remained unchanged despite a significant decrease in calculated cutaneous resistance (NTG: -26%, P less than 0.01; SNP: -34%, P less than 0.02] and subcutaneous vascular resistance changed only with SNP (-31%, P less than 0.02). After hypotension was discontinued the subcutaneous blood flow decreased (-13%, P = 0.05), whereas subcutaneous vascular resistance returned to its control values. An inverse relationship was found between fc and BPa (NTG: r = -0.525, P less than 0.01; SNP: r = -0.622, P less than 0.01) as well as with subcutaneous blood flow (NTG: r = -0.653, P less than 0.001; SNP: r = -0.573, P less than 0.01). In addition, we found oscillatory changes in deep HC values which differed in magnitudes (NTG 0.22 (SEM 0.09) W.m-1.degree C-1 vs SNP 0.42 (SEM 0.1) W.m-1.degrees C-1, P less than 0.01) and frequencies (NTG 0.02 (SEM 0.006) Hz vs SNP 0.01 (SEM 0.002) Hz, P less than 0.01). Despite unchanged blood flow, the effects of controlled hypotension on cutaneous and subcutaneous haemodynamics were different depending on the type of drug. These differences may have been related to counterregulatory responses and/or to direct vascular effects.  相似文献   

7.
The dynamics of ventilation (VE), oxygen uptake (VO2), carbon dioxide output (VCO2), and heart rate (fc) were studied in 12 healthy young men during upright and supine exercise. Responses to maximal and to two different types of submaximal exercise tests were contrasted. During incremental exercise to exhaustion, the maximal work rate, VO2max, VEmax, fc,max, and ventilatory threshold were all significantly reduced in supine compared to upright exercise (P less than 0.01-0.001). Following step increases or decreases in work rate between 25 W and 105 W, both VO2 and VCO2 responded more slowly in supine than upright exercise. Dynamics were also studied in two different pseudorandom binary-sequence (PRBS) exercise tests, with the work rate varying between 25 W and 105 W with either 5-s or 30-s durations of each PRBS unit. In both of these tests, there were no differences caused by body position in the amplitude or phase shifts obtained from Fourier analysis for any observed variable. These data show that the body position alters the dynamic response to the more traditional step increase in work rate, but not during PRBS exercise. It is speculated that the elevation of cardiac output observed with supine exercise in combination with the continuously varying work-rate pattern of the PRBS exercise allowed adequate, perhaps near steady-state, perfusion of the working muscles in these tests, whereas at the onset of a step increase in work rate, greater demands were placed on the mechanisms of blood flow redistribution.  相似文献   

8.
Kinetics of cardiorespiratory response to dynamic (DE) and then to rhythmic-static exercise (RSE) was compared in nine male subjects exercising in an upright position on a cycle ergometer at an intensity of about 50% VO2max and a mean pedalling frequency of 60 rpm over 5 min. Respiratory frequency (fR), tidal volume (VT), minute ventilation (VE), heart rate (fc), stroke volume (SV), and cardiac output (Qt) were measured continuously. The RSE caused a greater increase in fR than DE, whereas VT increased more during DE. The effect of reciprocal changes in fR and VT was that VE and its kinetics, expressed as a time constant (tau), did not differ between experimental situations. The ventilatory equivalent for O2 (VE: VO2) was greater for RSE (31.3) than for DE (23.0, P less than 0.01). Elevation of fc was similar for both types of exercise. The SV increased suddenly at the beginning of DE from 54 ml to 74 ml and then decreased to the end of exercise. At the onset of RSE only a moderate increase in SV was observed, from 56 ml to 62 ml, and then SV remained stable. The DE caused a greater and faster increase in Qt (4.20 l.min-1, for tau equal to 16.1 s) than RSE (3.25 l.min-1, for tau equal to 57.0 s, P less than 0.05 and P less than 0.002, respectively). Total peripheral resistance was almost 40% greater for RSE than for DE. No relationship was found between Qt and VE at the first 15 s of both types of exercise.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
We examined the effects of dynamic one-legged knee extension exercise on mean blood velocity (MBV) and muscle interstitial metabolite concentrations in healthy young subjects (n = 7). Femoral MBV (Doppler), mean arterial pressure (MAP) and muscle interstitial metabolite (adenosine, lactate, phosphate, K(+), pH, and H(+); by microdialysis) concentrations were measured during 5 min of exercise at 30 and 60% of maximal work capacity (W(max)). MAP increased (P < 0.05) to a similar extent during the two exercise bouts, whereas the increase in MBV was greater (P < 0.05) during exercise at 60% (77.00 +/- 6.77 cm/s) compared with 30% W(max) (43.71 +/- 3.71 cm/s). The increase in interstitial adenosine from rest to exercise was greater (P < 0.05) during the 60% (0.80 +/- 0.10 microM) compared with the 30% W(max) bout (0.57 +/- 0.10 microM). During exercise at 60% W(max), interstitial K(+) rose at a greater rate than during exercise at 30% W(max) (P < 0.05). However, pH increased (H(+) decreased) at similar rates for the two exercise intensities. During exercise, interstitial lactate and phosphate increased (P < 0.05) with no difference observed between the two intensities. After 5 min of recovery, MBV decreased to baseline levels after exercise at 30% W(max) (4.12 +/- 1.10 cm/s), whereas MBV remained above baseline levels after exercise at 60% W(max) (Delta19.46 +/- 2.61 cm/s; P < 0.05). MAP and interstitial adenosine, K(+), pH, and H(+) returned toward baseline levels. However, interstitial lactate and phosphate continued to increase during the recovery period. Thus an increase in exercise intensity resulted in concomitant changes in MBV and muscle interstitial adenosine and K(+), whereas similar changes were not observed for MAP or muscle interstitial pH, lactate, or phosphate. These data suggest that K(+) and/or adenosine may play an active role in the regulation of skeletal muscle blood flow during exercise.  相似文献   

10.
The present study was designed to evaluate time-of-day effects on electromyographic (EMG) activity changes during a short-term intense cycling exercise. In a randomized order, 22 male subjects were asked to perform a 30-s Wingate test against a constant braking load of 0.087?kg·kg(-1) body mass during two experimental sessions, which were set up either at 07:00 or 17:00?h. During the test, peak power (P(peak)), mean power (P(mean)), fatigue index (FI; % of decrease in power output throughout the 30 s), and evolution of power output (5-s span) throughout the exercise were analyzed. Surface EMG activity was recorded in both the vastus lateralis and vastus medialis muscles throughout the test and analyzed over a 5-s span. The root mean square (RMS) and mean power frequency (MPF) of EMG were calculated. Neuromuscular efficiency (NME) was estimated from the ratio of power to RMS. Resting core temperature, P(peak), P(mean), and FI were significantly higher (p?相似文献   

11.
Twenty young, untrained men performed two tests on cycle ergometer in order to verify whether the kinetics of the cardiorespiratory reactions exhibit any relation to maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max) in the untrained state. On the 1st day, the subjects exercised at work intensities of 50 and 100 W, the increase as a step function, for periods of 10 min each. The next day, they performed exercise at a relative intensity of 50% VO2max for 10 min. Respiratory frequency, tidal volume, minute ventilation (VE), heart rate (HR), stroke volume (SV), and cardiac output (Q) were measured continuously. The SV was measured by impedance plethysmography. All the cardiorespiratory variables increased rapidly at the onset of both absolute and relative intensity of work, with a faster response for Q than for VE. The increase in absolute intensity of work from 50 to 100 W caused a significantly slower cardiorespiratory reaction than at the beginning of exercise. The SV increased by 20 ml during first 20 s of both absolute and relative intensities of work and then began to decrease after 6 and 4 min of the exercise, respectively. The decrease in SV was associated with an increase in HR and a stable value of Q. Acceleration at the beginning of, and deceleration during recovery from, the relative intensity of work for VE, HR, and Q were well correlated with individual levels of VO2max in the tested men. It is concluded that the kinetics of cardiorespiratory reaction to a constant, relative intensity of work is related to VO2max in untrained men, and that the kinetics probably constitute a physiological feature of an individual.  相似文献   

12.
Increased nasal air flow during exercise was examined as a possible heat loss avenue contributing to selective brain cooling in hyperthermic humans. On 2 separate days, eight subjects [mean (SE) age, 26.4 (1.2) years] exercised on a cycle ergometer in a warm room [28 (0.2)°C; 28 (5)% relative humidity] to induce a moderate level of hyperthermia. In one session the nostrils were physically dilatated [average dilatation 1.55 (0.17) times] and in the other they were not (control). Both sessions started with a 5-min resting period; then subjects pedaled at 60 W for 5 min, 100 W for 15 min, and 150 W for 20 min. During dilatation both tympanic temperature (T ty) and forehead skin blood flow, estimated by laser doppler velocimetry, were significantly lower than during the control exercise of 150 W. Rates of increase of (T ty) during the 100-W exercise were the same in both conditions; however, during the 150-W exercise with dilatated nostrils (T ty) increased at a rate significantly lower than during control [1.1 (0.3)°C·h–1 vs 1.5 (0.4)°C·h–1]. The change in the rate of increase of T ty between conditions was significantly correlated to the degree of nostril dilatation (r = –0.77, P = 0.02), suggesting that the lower (T ty) observed was due to nostril dilatation. Facial skin temperature was not significantly different between sessions. The results suggest that the nasal cavity may act as a heat exchanger in selective brain cooling of exercising humans.  相似文献   

13.
To delineate age- and gender-related differences in physiological responses to cold exposure, men and women between the ages of 20 and 29 yr and 51 and 72 yr, wearing minimal clothing, were exposed at rest for 2 h to 28, 20, 15, and 10 degrees C room temperatures with 40% relative humidity. During the coldest exposure, the rates of increase in metabolic rate (W X m-2 or ml X kg lean body mass-1 X min-1 were similar for all groups. However, older women (n = 7) may have benefited from a larger (P less than 0.05) early metabolic (M) increase (40% within 15 min) than young men (18%) (n = 10), young women (5%) (n = 10), or older men (5%) (n = 10). A similar rapid M response in older women occurred during the 15 degrees C exposure. During all cold exposures, older women maintained constant rectal temperature (Tre) and young women maintained Tre only during the 20 degrees C exposures, whereas Tre of the men declined during all cold exposures (P less than 0.01). Changes in Tre and mean skin temperature (Ts) during cold exposure were largely related to body fat, although age and surface area/mass modified the changes in men. The data suggest that older men are more susceptible to cold ambients than younger people, since they did not prevent a further decline in their initially relatively low Tre. Despite greater insulation from body fat, the older women maintained a constant Tre at greater metabolic cost than men or younger women.  相似文献   

14.
During galloping, many animals display 1:1 coupling of breaths and strides. Locomotor respiratory coupling (LRC) may limit respiratory evaporative heat loss (REHL) by constraining respiratory frequency (f). Five sheep were exercised twice each, according to a five-step protocol: 5 min at the walk, 5 min at the trot (trot1), 10 min at the gallop, 5 min at the trot (trot2), and 5 min at the walk. Rectal temperature (T(re)), stride frequency, f, REHL, and arterial CO(2) tension and pH were measured at each step. Tidal volume (VT) was calculated. LRC was observed only during galloping. The coupling ratio remained at 1:1 while VT increased continuously during galloping, causing REHL to increase from 2.9 +/- 0.2 (SE) W/kg at the end of trot1 to a peak of 5.3 +/- 0.3 W/kg. T(re) rose from 39.0 +/- 0.1 degrees C preexercise to 40.2 +/- 0.2 degrees C at the end of galloping. At the gallop-trot2 transition, VT fell and f rose, despite a continued rise in T(re). Arterial CO(2) tension fell from 36.5 +/- 1.1 Torr preexercise to 31.8 +/- 1.4 Torr by the end of trot1 and then further to 21.5 +/- 1.2 Torr by the end of galloping, resulting in alkalosis. In conclusion, LRC did not prevent increases in REHL in sheep because VT increased. The increased VT caused hypocapnia and presumably elevated the cost of breathing.  相似文献   

15.
Plasma levels of catecholamines, cortisol, and glucose were monitored in rainbow trout during a 6-week forced swimming exercise programme. Compared to resting non-exercised controls, resting trained fish had lower levels of epinephrine, norephinephrine, cortisol, and glucose during the last 3 weeks of training. Initially, trained fish that were swimming had higher levels of epinephrine than resting trained fish. After 2 weeks of exercise, swimming did not significantly elevate epinephrine levels in trained fish. Glucose levels were consistently greater in swimming fish than in resting fish. At the end of the training period, exercised trout had lower (15–20%) oxygen consumption rates while resting or swimming than unexercised fish.
After a 5-month forced swimming exercise programme plasma levels of catecholamines and glucose were monitored in trained and untrained cannulated rainbow trout after 2 min of mild agitation. Trained fish showed an immediate (within 1 min) increase in the levels of epinephrine, but not norepinephrine and a delayed (within 15 min) increase in the levels of plasma glucose. Epinephrine levels returned to pre-stress levels within 15 min. Untrained fish had no significant increase in the plasma levels of norepinephrine, epinephrine, or glucose.  相似文献   

16.
The influence of work intensity and duration on the white blood cell (WBC), lymphocyte (L) and platelet (P) count response to exercise was studied in 16 trained subjects (22 +/- 5.4 years, means +/- SD). They performed three cyclo-ergospirometric protocols: A) 10 min at 150 W followed by a progressive test (30 W/3 min) till exhaustion; B) constant maximal work (VO2max); C) a 45 min Square-Wave Endurance Exercise Test (SWEET), (n = 5). Arterial blood samples were taken: at rest, submaximal and maximal exercise in A; maximal exercise in B; 15th, 30th and 45th min in the SWEET. Lactate, [H+], PaCO2, PaO2, [Hct], Hb, cortisol, ACTH, total platelet volume (TPV), total blood red cell (RBC), WBC, L and P were measured. At 150 W, WBC, L, P, and TPV increased. VO2max did not differ between A and B, but a difference was found in total exercise time (A = 25 +/- 3 min; B = 7 +/- 2 min, p less than 0.001). In A, at VO2max, the increase was very small for Hct, [Hb], and RBC (10%), in contrast with large changes for WBC (+93%), L (+137%), P (+32%), TPV (+35%), [H+] (+39%), lactate (+715%), and ACTH (+95%). At VO2max there were no differences in these variables between A and B. During the SWEET: WBC, L, P, TPV and ACTH increased at the 15th min as much as in VO2max, but no difference was observed between the 15th, 30th and 45th min, except for ACTH which continued to rise; the lactate increase during the SWEET was about half (+341%) the value observed at VO2max, and [H+] did not vary with respect to values at rest.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
The ventilatory response to sinusoidally varying exercise was studied in five adults and seven prepubertal children to determine whether the faster kinetics of ventilation observed in children during abrupt changes in exercise intensity remained more rapid when exercise intensity varied continuously. Each subject exercised on a cycle ergometer first against a constant load and then against a load fluctuating over six different periods ranging from 0.75 to 10 min. The pedal rate was kept constant for all loads. The inspiratory minute ventilation was determined breath-by-breath. Amplitude (A) and phase angle (phi) of the fundamental component and the first harmonics of the ventilatory response were calculated by Fourier analysis for an integer number of waves for each period. From the relationship between A, phi and frequency, dynamic parameters of a first order model with and without delay were compared between adults and children. Firstly we found that the ventilatory time constant was significantly faster in children: 49.7 (SD 9.1) s vs 74.6 (SD 11.1) s (P less than 0.01). Secondly, the change in A and phi with the frequency was not however characteristic of a first order system without delay in most of the subjects (phi greater than 90 degrees for the shorter periods). Thirdly, even when the ventilatory control system was described as a first order model with a positive delay, time constants remained significantly shorter in children: 45.6 (SD 5.7) s vs 67.4 (SD 13) s (P less than 0.01). The ability to increase ventilation faster in children appeared to be a characteristic of the ventilatory control system during exercise independent of the type of drive used.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of pyridostigmine on thermoregulatory responses was evaluated during exercise and heat stress. Eight heat acclimated, young adult male subjects received four doses of pyridostigmine (30 mg) or identical placebo tablets every 8 h, in a double blind, randomized, cross-over trial. A 30.3%, SD 4.6% inhibition of the circulating cholinesterase (ChE) activity was induced in the pyridostigmine-treated group. The subjects were exposed to 170-min exercise and heat-stress (dry bulb temperature, 33 degrees C; relative humidity 60%) consisting of 60 min in a sitting position and two bouts of 50-min walking (1.39 m.s-1, 5% gradient) which were separated by 10-min rest periods. No differences were found between treatments in the physiological responses and heat balance parameters at the end of exposure: heart rate (fc) was 141 beats.min-1, SD 16 and 150 beats.min-1, SD 12, rectal temperature (Tre) was 38.5 degrees C, SD 0.4 degrees and 38.6 degrees C, SD 0.3 degrees, heat storage was 60 W.m-2, SD 16 and 59 W.m-2, SD 15 and sweat rate was 678 g.h-1, SD 184 and 661 g.h-1, SD 133, in the pyridostigmine and placebo treatments, respectively. The changes in Tre and fc over the heat-exercise period were parallel in both study and control groups. Pyridostigmine caused a slight slowing of fc (5 beats.min-1) which was consistent throughout the entire exposure (P less than 0.001) but was of no clinical significance. The overall change in fc was similar for both groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
This study investigates the dynamic and resting intramuscular pressures associated with eccentric and concentric exercise of muscles in a low-compliance compartment. The left and righ leg anterior compartments of eight healthy males (ages 22-32 yr) were exercised by either concentric or eccentric contractions of the same load (400 submaximal contractions at constant rate, 20/min for 20 min at a load corresponding to 15% of individual maximal dorsiflexion torque). Tissue fluid pressures were measured with the slit-catheter technique before, during, and after the exercise. Average peak intramuscular pressure generated during eccentric exercise (236 mmHg) was significantly greater than during concentric exercise (157 mmHg, P less than 0.001). Peak isometric contraction pressure in the eccentrically exercised compartment was significantly higher both within 20 min postexercise and on the second postexercise day (P less than 0.001). Resting pressure 2 days postexercise was significantly higher on the eccentrically exercised side (10.5 mmHg) compared with the concentrically exercised (4.4 mmHg, P less than 0.05). The ability to sustain tension during postexercise isometric contractions was impaired on the "eccentric" side. Soreness was exclusively experienced in the eccentrically exercised muscles. We conclude that eccentric exercise causes significant intramuscular pressure elevation in the anterior compartment, not seen following concentric exercise, and that this may be one of the factors associated with development of delayed muscle soreness in a tight compartment.  相似文献   

20.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the validity of heart rate (fc) and ratings of perceived exertion (RPE) as indices of exercise intensity in a group of children while swimming. Six healthy male swimmers, aged 10-12, swam tethered using the breast-stroke in a flume. The resistance started at 1.0 kg and increased in 1.0 kg steps up to the point of their exhaustion. The subjects swam for 5 min during each period, with a rest of 10-20 min until they had returned to their resting fc level. The last exercise intensity was with the maximal mass the subjects could support for 2 min. The last min of oxygen consumption (VO2) and 30 s of fc were measured during each exercise period. The subjects gave their RPE assessment at the end of exercise. The individual relationships between fc and VO2, and percentage maximal oxygen consumption (%VO2max) were linear with a high correlation r = 0.962-0.996 and r = 0.962-0.996, respectively. Therefore, it was concluded that fc was valid as an index of the exercise intensity of children while swimming. Compared to the results found in adults using a similar protocol, the children's fc were 8.3-26.9 beats.min-1 higher than those of the adults at the given %VO2max. The present study showed two different patterns in the relationship between VO2 and RPE in individuals. In two subjects the RPE increased linearly with VO2 while in the other four subjects the increase was discontinuous. If fc and RPE were to be applied to the setting and evaluation of exercise intensity during swimming, it would seem that fc would be a more useful guide than RPE for some children.  相似文献   

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