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Effect of plasma volume loss during graded exercise testing on blood lactate concentration
Authors:Davis James A  Rozenek Ralph  Decicco Derek M  Carizzi Michael T  Pham Patrick H
Affiliation:Laboratory of Applied Physiology, Department of Kinesiology, California State University/Long Beach, Long Beach, CA 90840-4901, USA. jad@csulb.edu
Abstract:
Previous studies have shown that plasma volume (PV) loss can be a confounding variable in the interpretation of changes in blood constituents. We examined the effect of PV loss on three features of the blood lactate versus work-rate relationship, namely, slight blood lactate increase during the early stages of graded exercise testing (GXT); work rate at the onset of a systematic increase in blood lactate, i.e., lactate threshold (LT); and work rate at a blood lactate concentration of 4 mM, i.e., onset of blood lactate accumulation (OBLA). Fourteen subjects underwent cycle ergometer GXT. Blood samples were obtained at rest and at the end of each 3-min work-rate increment and analyzed for hematocrit and lactate concentration. For exercise levels up to and including LT, PV loss was relatively stable at approximately 2.8%. Beyond LT, PV loss accelerated. From the first work rate to LT, blood lactate concentration uncorrected for PV loss increased 0.24 +/- 0.07 mM (P < 0.05). After correction for PV loss, the increase was 0.21 +/- 0.08 mM (P < 0.05). These mean increases were not significantly different from each other. For the four exercise levels above LT common to most subjects, PV-corrected lactate values were significantly lower than uncorrected values. Correction of lactate values for PV loss did not alter LT for any subject, but it did result in a significant increase in OBLA. Thus, PV loss has the potential to be a confounding variable for the interpretation of blood lactate parameters that are determined at exercise levels above LT.
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