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1.
The mechanism of myocardial hibernation, the reversible downregulation of contractile activity on reduction of coronary flow with unchanged cardiac energetics, is presently not understood. The oxygen consumption (VO(2)), shortening fraction (DeltaL), energy status [phosphocreatine (PCr), ATP, and adenosine and lactate release], and free intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) were measured in isolated rat cardiomyocytes at precisely controlled ambient PO(2) (Oxystat). When PO(2) was reduced from 25 to 6 mmHg, VO(2) decreased by 50%, while DeltaL was downregulated from 11.2 +/- 4.1 to 7.6 +/- 4.0%, and energy status was unchanged in the steady state (observation time 12 min). Only transiently PCr decreased, and lactate and adenosine release increased. Further reduction of PO(2) (to 3 mmHg) reduced VO(2) by 80%, decreased PCr by 35%, moderately increased adenosine and lactate release, and progressively reduced DeltaL by 50% (to 5.6 +/- 3.3%). All parameters fully recovered during reoxygenation. PO(2)-dependent downregulation of DeltaL was accompanied by a progressive reduction in systolic [Ca(2+)](i) (from 512 +/- 110 to 357 +/- 91 nmol/l at 6 mmHg and to 251 +/- 69 nmol/l at 3 mmHg), whereas diastolic free [Ca(2+)](i) remained unchanged. Therefore, the mechanism of the reversible, PO(2)-dependent downregulation of contractile activity (myocardial hibernation) involves a substantial reduction of systolic calcium.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of temperature acclimation, acute temperature variation and progressive hypoxia on oxygen consumption rates (VO2) were determined for the zebra mussel Dreissena polymorpha. In the first experiment, after acclimation to 5, 15 or 25 degrees C for at least 2 weeks, VO2 was determined at 5 degrees C increments from 5 to 45 degrees C. VO2 increased in all three acclimation groups from 5 to 30 degrees C, corresponding to the normal ambient temperature range for this species. Mussels displayed imperfect temperature compensation at temperatures above 15 degrees C, but exhibited little acclimatory ability below 15 degrees C. In the hypoxia experiment, VO2 was determined over the course of progressive hypoxia, from full saturation (oxygen tension [PO2]=160 Torr [21.3 kPa]) to a PO2 at which oxygen uptake ceased (<10 Torr [1.3 kPa]). Mussels were acclimated to either 5, 15 or 25 degrees C for at least 2 weeks and their respiratory response to progressive hypoxia was measured at three test temperatures (5, 15 and 25 degrees C). The degree of oxygen regulation increased with increasing test temperature, particularly from 5 to 15 degrees C, but decreased with increasing acclimation temperature. The decreased metabolic rate observed for warm-acclimated animals, particularly in the upper portion of the temperature range of the zebra mussel, may allow for conservation of organic energy stores during warm summer months. Compared to other freshwater bivalves, D. polymorpha is a relatively poor oxygen regulator, corresponding with its preference for well-oxygenated aquatic habitats. In addition, a new quantitative method for determining the degree of oxygen regulation is presented.  相似文献   

3.
We tested the hypothesis that vagal withdrawal plays a role in the rapid (phase I) cardiopulmonary response to exercise. To this aim, in five men (24.6+/-3.4 yr, 82.1+/-13.7 kg, maximal aerobic power 330+/-67 W), we determined beat-by-beat cardiac output (Q), oxygen delivery (QaO2), and breath-by-breath lung oxygen uptake (VO2) at light exercise (50 and 100 W) in normoxia and acute hypoxia (fraction of inspired O2=0.11), because the latter reduces resting vagal activity. We computed Q from stroke volume (Qst, by model flow) and heart rate (fH, electrocardiography), and QaO2 from Q and arterial O2 concentration. Double exponentials were fitted to the data. In hypoxia compared with normoxia, steady-state fH and Q were higher, and Qst and VO2 were unchanged. QaO2 was unchanged at rest and lower at exercise. During transients, amplitude of phase I (A1) for VO2 was unchanged. For fH, Q and QaO2, A1 was lower. Phase I time constant (tau1) for QaO2 and VO2 was unchanged. The same was the case for Q at 100 W and for fH at 50 W. Qst kinetics were unaffected. In conclusion, the results do not fully support the hypothesis that vagal withdrawal determines phase I, because it was not completely suppressed. Although we can attribute the decrease in A1 of fH to a diminished degree of vagal withdrawal in hypoxia, this is not so for Qst. Thus the dual origin of the phase I of Q and QaO2, neural (vagal) and mechanical (venous return increase by muscle pump action), would rather be confirmed.  相似文献   

4.
Human muscle function following prolonged eccentric exercise   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
4 subjects performed repeated eccentric contractions with leg extensors during prolonged downhill walking (-25% gradient) at 6.44 km.h-1 until collapse due to muscle weakness (range of exercise duration 29 to 40 min). During the exercise oxygen uptake rose progressively from approximately 45% of the previously determined VO2max at 10 min to approximately 65% at the end of the exercise. Following the exercise there was an immediate, significant, and sustained reduction in maximal voluntary isometric contraction, and short term (anaerobic) power output measured concentrically on an isokinetic ergometer. These reductions in muscle function persisted for 96 hours post exercise, and were reflected by significant reductions in the tension generated at low frequency (20 Hz) relative to higher frequency (50 Hz) percutaneous stimulation of the quadriceps. All four subjects showed an increase in plasma levels of creatine kinase post eccentric exercise. Performing concentric contractions by walking uphill for one hour at a significantly greater metabolic cost failed to induce comparable reductions in muscle function. These results provide evidence for the consequences of prolonged eccentric work upon dynamic function which complements earlier reports of structural, enzymatic, and static function changes.  相似文献   

5.
Progressive hyperoxia caused a gradual increase in arterial blood oxygen tension (PaO2). Initially there was no change in venous O2 tension (PvO2) but in extreme hyperoxia (PO2 650 mmHg) it increased to 2.5 times the normoxic (PO2 150 mmHg) level (Table 1). Ventilation frequency gradually decreased down to 73% of the normoxic value as PO2 rose towards a maximum at 700 mmHg (Fig. 1). In moderately hyperoxic water (mean PO2 233 mmHg) heart rate (fH) increased significantly above the normoxic level. Further increases in ambient PO2 caused a progressive reduction in fH to a level significantly below the normoxic rate in extreme hyperoxia (Fig. 2). Injection of atropine abolished these changes, and the atropinized fH was similar to that measured during moderate hyperoxia. The initial increase in fH during progressive hyperoxia is attributed to release of vagal tone, due to removal of normoxic stimulation of peripheral oxygen receptors; whereas, the secondary bradycardia is attributed to the stimulation of oxygen receptors located in the venous system. Injection of 5 ml of hyperoxaemic blood into the venous system of normoxic fish caused a transient bradycardia (Fig. 3), lasting a mean of 73 sec, which is the approximate time for passage of the blood volume of the venous system through the heart. This bradycardia was neither pH dependent nor a pressor response and provides supporting evidence for the existence of a venous oxygen receptor.  相似文献   

6.
Measuring standard metabolic rate (SMR) and specific dynamic action (SDA) has yielded insight into patterns of energy expenditure in snakes, but less emphasis has been placed on identifying metabolic variation and associated energy cost of circadian rhythms. To estimate SMR, SDA, and identify metabolic variation associated with circadian cycles in nocturnally active African house snakes (Lamprophis fuliginosus), we measured oxygen consumption rates (VO2) at frequent intervals before and during digestion of meals equaling 10%, 20% and 30% of their body mass. Circadian rhythms in metabolism were perceptible in the VO2 data during fasting and after the initial stages of digestion. We estimated SMR of L. fuliginosus (mean mass=16.7+/-0.3 g) to be 0.68+/-0.02 (+/-SEM) mL O2/h at 25 degrees C. Twenty-four hours after eating, VO2 peaked at 3.2-5.3 times SMR. During digestion of meals equaling 10-30% of their body mass, the volume of oxygen consumed ranged from 109 to 119 mL O2 for SMR, whereas extra oxygen consumed for digestion and assimilation ranged from 68 to 256 mL O2 (equivalent to 14.5-17.0% of ingested energy). The oxygen consumed due to the rise in metabolism during the active phase of the daily cycle ranged from 55 to 66 mL O2 during digestion. Peak VO2, digestive scope, and SDA increased with increasing meal size. Comparisons of our estimates to estimates derived from methods used in previous investigations resulted in wide variance of metabolic variables (up to 39%), likely due to the influence of circadian rhythms and activity on the selection of baseline metabolism. We suggest frequent VO2 measurements over multiple days, coupled with mathematical methods that reduce the influence of undesired sources of VO2 variation (e.g., activity, circadian cycles) are needed to reliably assess SMR and SDA in animals exhibiting strong circadian cycles.  相似文献   

7.
Respiration of antarctic fish from McMurdo Sound   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
1. Resting rates of oxygen uptake were measured for nine species of unstressed fish living at -1.8 degree C in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica (77-78 degrees S). Interspecific differences in VO2 were correlated with the habits and activity of the fish. 2. The cryopelagic Pagothenia borchgrevinki regulated oxygen uptake down to a critical PO2 of approximately 60 mmHg. The inactive benthic species Trematomus centronotus extracted oxygen to lower PO2 and appeared to have a lesser degree of oxyregulation when the data were analysed using a quadratic model. 3. Cutaneous oxygen uptake in the nototheniids T. bernacchii and P. borchgrevinki amounted to 9 and 17% of total VO2 under normoxic conditions which is less than that reported for scaleless Antarctic fish. 4. The contentious concept of metabolic cold adaptation in polar fish has been reviewed, and the opinion expressed that the phenomenon cannot be dismissed on the grounds of technically incompetent measurement, or through inappropriate extrapolation of data from fish at lower latitudes.  相似文献   

8.
Six subjects rode a bicycle ergometer on three occasions breathing 17, 21, or 60% oxygen. In addition to rest and recovery periods, each subject worked for 10 min at 55% of maximal oxygen uptake (VO2 max) and then to exhaustion at approximately 90% VO2 max. Performance time, inspired and expired gas fractions, ventilation, and arterialized venous oxygen tension (PO2), carbon dioxide tension (PCO2), lactate, and pH were measured. VO2, carbon dioxide output, [H+]a, and [HCO3-]a were calculated. Performance times were longer in hyperoxia than in normoxia or hypoxia. However, VO2 was not different at exhaustion in normoxia compared with hypoxia or hyperoxia. During exercise, hypoxia was associated with increased lactate levels and decreased [H+]a, PCO2, and [HCO3-]a. The opposite trends were generally associated with hyperoxia. At exhaustion, [H+]a was not different under any inspired oxygen fraction. These results support the contention that oxygen is not limiting for exercise of this intensity and duration. The results also suggest that [H+] is a possible limiting factor and that the effect of oxygen on performance is perhaps related to control of [H+].  相似文献   

9.
We present the first data on the differences in routine and active metabolic rates for sexually maturing migratory adult sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) that were intercepted in the ocean and then held in either seawater or freshwater. Routine and active oxygen uptake rates (MO2) were significantly higher (27%-72%) in seawater than in freshwater at all swimming speeds except those approaching critical swimming speed. During a 45-min recovery period, the declining postexercise oxygen uptake remained 58%-73% higher in seawater than in freshwater. When fish performed a second swim test, active metabolic rates again remained 28%-81% higher for fish in seawater except at the critical swimming speed. Despite their differences in metabolic rates, fish in both seawater and freshwater could repeat the swim test and reach a similar maximum oxygen uptake and critical swimming speed as in the first swim test, even without restoring routine metabolic rate between swim tests. Thus, elevated MO2 related to either being in seawater as opposed to freshwater or not being fully recovered from previous exhaustive exercise did not present itself as a metabolic loading that limited either critical swimming performance or maximum MO2. The basis for the difference in metabolic rates of migratory sockeye salmon held in seawater and freshwater is uncertain, but it could include differences in states of nutrition, reproduction, and restlessness, as well as ionic differences. Regardless, this study elucidates some of the metabolic costs involved during the migration of adult salmon from seawater to freshwater, which may have applications for fisheries conservation and management models of energy use.  相似文献   

10.
We asked to what extent cold exposure during embryonic growth, and the accompanying hypometabolism, may interfere with the normal development of thermogenesis. White Leghorn chicken eggs were incubated in control conditions (38 degrees C) or at 36 or 35 degrees C. Embryos incubated at a lower temperature (34 degrees C) failed to hatch. The cold-incubated embryos had lower oxygen consumption (VO2) and body weight (W) throughout incubation, and hatching was delayed by about, respectively, 1 and 2 days. The W-VO2 relationship of the cold-incubated embryos was as in controls, indicating that cold-induced hypometabolism was at the expense of the growth, not the maintenance, component of VO2. At embryonic day E11, the metabolic response to changes in ambient temperature (T) over the 30-39 degrees C range was typically poikilothermic, with Q10 = 1.8-1.9, and similar among all sets of embryos. Toward the end of incubation (E20), the thermogenic responses of the cold-incubated embryos were significantly lower than in controls. This difference occurred also in the few-hour old hatchlings (H1), even though, at this time, W was similar among groups. Exposure to cold during only the last 3 days of incubation (from E18 to H1), i.e. during the developmental onset of the endothermic mechanisms, did not lower the thermogenic capacity of the hatchlings. In conclusion, sustained cold-induced hypometabolism throughout incubation blunted the rate of embryonic growth and the development of thermogenesis. This latter phenomenon could be an example of epigenetic regulation, i.e. of environmental factors exerting a long-term effect on gene expression.  相似文献   

11.
This study was designed to investigate the role of tissue oxygenation in some of the factors that are thought to regulate muscle respiration and metabolism. Tissue oxygenation was altered by reductions in O2 delivery (muscle blood flow x arterial O2 content), induced by decreases in arterial PO2 (PaO2). O2 uptake (VO2) was measured in isolated in situ canine gastrocnemius at rest and while working at two stimulation intensities (isometric tetanic contractions at 0.5 and 1 contractions/s) on three separate occasions, with only the level of PaO2 (78, 30, and 21 Torr) being different for each occasion. Muscle blood flow was held constant (pump perfusion) at each work intensity for the three different levels of PaO2. Muscle biopsies were obtained at the end of each rest and work period. Muscle VO2 was significantly less (P less than 0.05) at both stimulation intensities for the hypoxemic conditions, whereas [ATP] was reduced only during the highest work intensity during both hypoxemic conditions (31% reduction at 21 Torr PaO2 and 17% at 30 Torr). For each level of PaO2, the relationships between the changes that occurred in VO2 and levels of phosphocreatine, ADP, and ATP/ADP.P(i) as the stimulation intensity was increased were significantly correlated; however, the slopes and intercepts of these lines were significantly different for each PaO2. Thus a greater change in any of the proposed regulators of tissue respiration (e.g., phosphocreatine, ADP) was required to achieve a given VO2 as PaO2 was decreased.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
We studied the pulmonary vascular response to progressive metabolic acidaemia and to an abrupt increase in oxygen tension during metabolic acidaemia in 8 chronically-prepared fetal sheep. Left pulmonary artery blood flow was measured by electromagnetic flow transducer. Two and a half hour infusion of NH4Cl into the fetal inferior vena cava caused pH to fall to 6.94 +/- 0.01 from 7.37 +/- 0.01 (P less than 0.001). During this period of progressive metabolic acidaemia, left pulmonary artery blood flow increased from a baseline value of 60 +/- 8 to 105 +/- 14 ml.min-1 (P less than 0.002). Pulmonary artery pressure did not change significantly and calculated pulmonary vascular resistance fell indicating fetal pulmonary vasodilation. PO2 rose significantly (19.8 +/- 0.7 to 24.1 +/- 1.8 torr; P less than 0.03) and oxygen saturation fell (54.6 +/- 2.8% to 38.9 +/- 3.5%; P less than 0.001) confirming a rightward shift of the oxyhaemoglobin dissociation curve. During acidaemia, administration of 100% oxygen to the ewe further increased fetal PO2 to 37.9 +/- 2.3 torr within 10 min (P less than 0.001) and this increase in PO2 was accompanied by an increase in left pulmonary artery blood flow (P less than 0.001), a fall in pulmonary artery pressure (P less than 0.03) and a decrease in pulmonary vascular resistance (P less than 0.001) indicating further vasodilation. The response of the fetal pulmonary circulation to a 2-h period of increased oxygen tension was qualitatively similar in acidaemic and non-acidaemic fetuses. We conclude that the progressive metabolic acidaemia imposed by these experimental conditions increases pulmonary blood flow likely through an increase in fetal PO2 and that metabolic acidaemia does not block the normal vasodilatory response to an increase in oxygen tension.  相似文献   

13.
The role of nitric oxide (NO) and reactive oxygen species (ROS) in regulating capillary perfusion was studied in the hamster cheek pouch model during normoxia and after 20 min of exposure to 10% O2-90% N2. We measured PO2 by using phosphorescence quenching microscopy and ROS production in systemic blood. Identical experiments were performed after treatment with the NO synthase inhibitor NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA) and after the reinfusion of the NO donor 2,2'-(hydroxynitrosohydrazono)bis-etanamine (DETA/NO) after treatment with L-NMMA. Hypoxia caused a significant decrease in the systemic PO2. During normoxia, arteriolar intravascular PO2 decreased progressively from 47.0 +/- 3.5 mmHg in the larger arterioles to 28.0 +/- 2.5 mmHg in the terminal arterioles; conversely, intravascular PO2 was 7-14 mmHg and approximately uniform in all arterioles. Tissue PO2 was 85% of baseline. Hypoxia significantly dilated arterioles, reduced blood flow, and increased capillary perfusion (15%) and ROS (72%) relative to baseline. Administration of L-NMMA during hypoxia further reduced capillary perfusion to 47% of baseline and increased ROS to 34% of baseline, both changes being significant. Tissue PO2 was reduced by 33% versus the hypoxic group. Administration of DETA/NO after L-NMMA caused vasodilation, normalized ROS, and increased capillary perfusion and tissue PO2. These results indicate that during normoxia, oxygen is supplied to the tissue mostly by the arterioles, whereas in hypoxia, oxygen is supplied to tissue by capillaries by a NO concentration-dependent mechanism that controls capillary perfusion and tissue PO2, involving capillary endothelial cell responses to the decrease in lipid peroxide formation controlled by NO availability during low PO2 conditions.  相似文献   

14.
Previously, by measuring myoglobin-associated PO(2) (P(Mb)O(2)) during maximal exercise, we have demonstrated that 1) intracellular PO(2) is 10-fold less than calculated mean capillary PO(2) and 2) intracellular PO(2) and maximum O(2) uptake (VO(2 max)) fall proportionately in hypoxia. To further elucidate this relationship, five trained subjects performed maximum knee-extensor exercise under conditions of normoxia (21% O(2)), hypoxia (12% O(2)), and hyperoxia (100% O(2)) in balanced order. Quadriceps O(2) uptake (VO(2)) was calculated from arterial and venous blood O(2) concentrations and thermodilution blood flow measurements. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy was used to determine myoglobin desaturation, and an O(2) half-saturation pressure of 3.2 Torr was used to calculate P(Mb)O(2) from saturation. Skeletal muscle VO(2 max) at 12, 21, and 100% O(2) was 0.86 +/- 0.1, 1.08 +/- 0.2, and 1.28 +/- 0.2 ml. min(-1). ml(-1), respectively. The 100% O(2) values approached twice that previously reported in human skeletal muscle. P(Mb)O(2) values were 2.3 +/- 0.5, 3.0 +/- 0.7, and 4.1 +/- 0.7 Torr while the subjects breathed 12, 21, and 100% O(2), respectively. From 12 to 21% O(2), VO(2) and P(Mb)O(2) were again proportionately related. However, 100% O(2) increased VO(2 max) relatively less than P(Mb)O(2), suggesting an approach to maximal mitochondrial capacity with 100% O(2). These data 1) again demonstrate very low cytoplasmic PO(2) at VO(2 max), 2) are consistent with supply limitation of VO(2 max) of trained skeletal muscle, even in hyperoxia, and 3) reveal a disproportionate increase in intracellular PO(2) in hyperoxia, which may be interpreted as evidence that, in trained skeletal muscle, very high mitochondrial metabolic limits to muscle VO(2) are being approached.  相似文献   

15.
Pregnant rats were kept at a simulated altitude of 4,500 m (PO2 91 Torr) for the whole of gestation and returned to sea level 1 day after giving birth. During pregnancy, body weight gain and food intake were approximately 30% less than in controls at sea level. Measurements were made on the 1-day-old (HYPO) pups after a few hours at sea level. In normoxia, ventilation (VE) measured by flow plethysmography was more (+17%) and O2 consumption (VO2) measured by a manometric method was less (-19%) than in control (CONT) pups; in HYPO pups VE/VO2 was 44% greater than in CONT pups. In acute hyperoxia, VE/VO2 of HYPO and CONT pups decreased by a similar amount (15-20%), indicating some limitation in O2 availability for both groups of pups in normoxia. However, VE/VO2 of HYPO pups, even in hyperoxia, remained above (+34%) that of CONT pups. HYPO pups weighed slightly less than CONT pups, their lungs were hypoplastic, and their hearts were a larger fraction of body weight. An additional group of female rats was acclimatized (8 days) to high altitude before insemination. During pregnancy, body weight gain and food intake of these females were similar to those of pregnant rats at sea level. Measurements on the 1-day-old pups of this group were similar to those of HYPO pups. We conclude that newborn rats born after hypoxic gestation present metabolic adaptation (low VO2) and acclimatization (high VE/VO2), possibly because of hypoxemia. Maternal acclimatization before insemination substantially alters maternal growth in hypoxia but does not affect neonatal outcome.  相似文献   

16.
These experiments examined the exercise-induced changes in pulmonary gas exchange in elite endurance athletes and tested the hypothesis that an inadequate hyperventilatory response might explain the large intersubject variability in arterial partial pressure of oxygen (PaO2) during heavy exercise in this population. Twelve highly trained endurance cyclists [maximum oxygen consumption (VO2max) range = 65-77 ml.kg-1.min-1] performed a normoxic graded exercise test on a cycle ergometer to VO2max at sea level. During incremental exercise at VO2max, 5 of the 12 subjects had ideal alveolar to arterial PO2 gradients (PA-aO2) of above 5 kPa (range 5-5.7) and a decline from resting PaO2 (delta PaO2) 2.4 kPa or above (range 2.4-2.7). In contrast, 4 subjects had a maximal exercise PA-aO2 of 4.0-4.3 kPa with delta PaO2 of 0.4-1.3 kPa while the remaining 3 subjects had PA-aO2 of 4.3-5 kPa with delta PaO2 between 1.7 and 2.0 kPa. The correlation between PAO2 and PaO2 at VO2max was 0.17. Further, the correlation between the ratio of ventilation to oxygen consumption vs PaO2 and arterial partial pressure of carbon dioxide vs PaO2 at VO2max was 0.17 and 0.34, respectively. These experiments demonstrate that heavy exercise results in significantly compromised pulmonary gas exchange in approximately 40% of the elite endurance athletes studied. These data do not support the hypothesis that the principal mechanism to explain this gas exchange failure is an inadequate hyperventilatory response.  相似文献   

17.
The metabolic changes accompanying diaphragm fatigue caused by supramaximal stimulation of the phrenic nerves are incompletely described. In particular, we wished to determine whether the occurrence of anaerobic metabolism correlated with fatigue as defined by decline in force generation. In 10 anesthetized mechanically ventilated mongrel dogs we measured arterial pressure, transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi), phrenic arterial flow (Qdi-Doppler flow probe), arterial and phrenic venous blood gases, and lactate levels. From these we derived indexes of diaphragm O2 consumption (VO2) and lactate production. Bilateral phrenic nerve pacing was carried out (50 Hz, duty cycle 0.4, 24 contractions/min) for two 15-min pacing periods separated by a 45-min rest period. Over each pacing period Pdi decreased from approximately 16 to approximately 10 cmH2O (P less than 0.01, no significant difference between periods). Initially, during pacing, Qdi and VO2 each increased fivefold over prepacing base line. Qdi remained elevated at this level whereas VO2 decreased over the pacing period by approximately 25%. Hence, the change in VO2 over the pacing period was due primarily to changes in O2 extraction. During the first pacing period lactate production was observed early and declined throughout the pacing period. No lactate production was observed during the second pacing period, although Pdi, VO2, and Qdi responses were the same for both pacing periods. Phrenic venous PO2 remained greater than 30 Torr throughout both pacing periods.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
We determined how close highly trained athletes [n = 8; maximal oxygen consumption (VO2max) = 73 +/- 1 ml.kg-1.min-1] came to their mechanical limits for generating expiratory airflow and inspiratory pleural pressure during maximal short-term exercise. Mechanical limits to expiratory flow were assessed at rest by measuring, over a range of lung volumes, the pleural pressures beyond which no further increases in flow rate are observed (Pmaxe). The capacity to generate inspiratory pressure (Pcapi) was also measured at rest over a range of lung volumes and flow rates. During progressive exercise, tidal pleural pressure-volume loops were measured and plotted relative to Pmaxe and Pcapi at the measured end-expiratory lung volume. During maximal exercise, expiratory flow limitation was reached over 27-76% of tidal volume, peak tidal inspiratory pressure reached an average of 89% of Pcapi, and end-inspiratory lung volume averaged 86% of total lung capacity. Mechanical limits to ventilation (VE) were generally reached coincident with the achievement of VO2max; the greater the ventilatory response, the greater was the degree of mechanical limitation. Mean arterial blood gases measured during maximal exercise showed a moderate hyperventilation (arterial PCO2 = 35.8 Torr, alveolar PO2 = 110 Torr), a widened alveolar-to-arterial gas pressure difference (32 Torr), and variable degrees of hypoxemia (arterial PO2 = 78 Torr, range 65-83 Torr). Increasing the stimulus to breathe during maximal exercise by inducing either hypercapnia (end-tidal PCO2 = 65 Torr) or hypoxemia (saturation = 75%) failed to increase VE, inspiratory pressure, or expiratory pressure. We conclude that during maximal exercise, highly trained individuals often reach the mechanical limits of the lung and respiratory muscle for producing alveolar ventilation. This level of ventilation is achieved at a considerable metabolic cost but with a mechanically optimal pattern of breathing and respiratory muscle recruitment and without sacrifice of a significant alveolar hyperventilation.  相似文献   

19.
The relative roles of ventilation-perfusion (VA/Q) inequality, alveolar-capillary diffusion resistance, postpulmonary shunt, and gas phase diffusion limitation in determining arterial PO2 (PaO2) were assessed in nine normal unacclimatized men at rest and during bicycle exercise at sea level and three simulated altitudes (5,000, 10,000, and 15,000 ft; barometric pressures = 632, 523, and 429 Torr). We measured mixed expired and arterial inert and respiratory gases, minute ventilation, and cardiac output. Using the multiple inert gas elimination technique, PaO2 and the arterial O2 concentration expected from VA/Q inequality alone were compared with actual values, lower measured PaO2 indicating alveolar-capillary diffusion disequilibrium for O2. At sea level, alveolar-arterial PO2 differences were approximately 10 Torr at rest, increasing to approximately 20 Torr at a metabolic consumption of O2 (VO2) of 3 l/min. There was no evidence for diffusion disequilibrium, similar results being obtained at 5,000 ft. At 10 and 15,000 ft, resting alveolar-arterial PO2 difference was less than at sea level with no diffusion disequilibrium. During exercise, alveolar-arterial PO2 difference increased considerably more than expected from VA/Q mismatch alone. For example, at VO2 of 2.5 l/min at 10,000 ft, total alveolar-arterial PO2 difference was 30 Torr and that due to VA/Q mismatch alone was 15 Torr. At 15,000 ft and VO2 of 1.5 l/min, these values were 25 and 10 Torr, respectively. Expected and actual PaO2 agreed during 100% O2 breathing at 15,000 ft, excluding postpulmonary shunt as a cause of the larger alveolar-arterial O2 difference than accountable by inert gas exchange.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Oxygen delivery to muscle, its consumption and glycolytic flux, all of each affect and restrict aerobic performance, are discussed. Energy supply of intensive exercise till exhaustion lasting 3 to 4 min is provided mainly by oxidative metabolism, simultaneously glycolytic flux may be increased considerably. Other conditions being equal, capacity of oxygen delivery determines oxygen partial pressure in myoplasm of exercising/contracting muscle. With PO2 in myoplasm increasing from 0 to 1-2 mm Hg oxygen consumption (VO2) in mitochondria enhances dramatically, with further increase of PO2 its rise slows down. At the ascending part of VO2-PO2 relationship for mitochondria the increase of VO2 is noticeably restricted by oxygen delivery to contracting muscle. When PO2 approaches plateau of the VO2-PO2 relationship, an increase of VO2 is restricted by mitochondria capacity to accumulate oxygen and augmented oxygen delivery will not lead to a significant increase of muscle VO2. On the other hand considerable accumulation of glycolytic metabolites in contracting muscle causes a decrease of contractility which in its turn may restrict aerobic performance. Noteworthy no strict relationship between glycolytic flux and PO2 in myoplasm exists. That is why correct evaluation of factors limiting aerobic performance presupposes simultaneous evaluation of both glycolytic flux and oxygen consumption in muscle which in its turn depends on oxygen delivery to mitochondria and its utilization.  相似文献   

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