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Central circulatory and peripheral O2 extraction changes as interactive facilitators of pulmonary O2 uptake during a repeated high-intensity exercise protocol in humans
Authors:Yoshiyuki Fukuba  Masako Yamaoka Endo  Yukie Ohe  Yuiko Hirotoshi  Asami Kitano  Chiaki Shiragiku  Akira Miura  Osamu Fukuda  Hatsumi Ueoka  Motohiko Miyachi
Affiliation:(1) Department of Exercise Science and Physiology, School of Health Sciences, Prefectural University of Hiroshima, 1-1-71, Ujina-higashi, Minami-ku, Hiroshima 734-8558, Japan;(2) Department of Nutritional Sciences, Yasuda Women’s University, Hiroshima 731-0153, Japan;(3) Laboratory for Human Science and Biomedical Engineering, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Kyushu Branch, Tosu 841-0052, Japan;(4) Laboratory of Physical Activity and Health Evaluation, National Institute of Health and Nutrition, Tokyo 162-8636, Japan
Abstract:
It has frequently been demonstrated that prior high-intensity exercise facilitates pulmonary oxygen uptake $$({dot{V}hbox{O}_2})$$ response at the onset of subsequent identical exercise. To clarify the roles of central O2 delivery and/or peripheral O2 extraction in determining this phenomenon, we investigated the relative contributions of cardiac output (CO) and arteriovenous O2 content difference $$(hbox{a-}{bar{rm v}hbox{DO}_2})$$ to the $${dot{V}hbox{O}_2}$$ transient during repeated bouts of high-intensity knee extension (KE) exercise. Nine healthy subjects volunteered to participate in this study. The protocol consisted of two consecutive 6-min KE exercise bouts in a supine position (work rate 70–75% of peak power) separated by 6 min of rest. Throughout the protocol, continuous-wave Doppler ultrasound was used to measure beat-by-beat CO (i.e., via simultaneous measurement of stroke volume and the diameter of the arterial aorta). The phase II $${dot{V}hbox{O}_2}$$ response was significantly faster and the slow component (phase III) was significantly attenuated during the second KE bout compared to the first. This was a result of increased CO during the first 30 s of exercise: CO contributing to 100 and 56% of the $${dot{V}hbox{O}_2}$$ speeding at 10 and 30 s, respectively. After this, the contribution of $$hbox{a-}{bar{rm v}hbox{DO}_2}$$ became increasingly more predominant: being responsible to an estimated 64% of the $${dot{V}hbox{O}_2}$$ speeding at 90 s, which rose to 100% by 180 s. This suggests that, while both CO and $$hbox{a-}{bar{rm v}hbox{DO}_2}$$ clearly interact to determine the $${dot{V}hbox{O}_2}$$ response, the speeding of $${dot{V}hbox{O}_2}$$ kinetics by prior high-intensity KE exercise is predominantly attributable to increases in $$hbox{a-}{bar{rm v}hbox{DO}_2}$$.
Keywords:High-intensity exercise  Cardiac output  Arteriovenous O2 content difference
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