Central circulatory and peripheral O2 extraction changes as interactive facilitators of pulmonary O2 uptake during a repeated high-intensity exercise protocol in humans |
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Authors: | Yoshiyuki Fukuba Masako Yamaoka Endo Yukie Ohe Yuiko Hirotoshi Asami Kitano Chiaki Shiragiku Akira Miura Osamu Fukuda Hatsumi Ueoka Motohiko Miyachi |
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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 |
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Abstract: | It has frequently been demonstrated that prior high-intensity exercise facilitates pulmonary oxygen uptake 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 to the 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 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 speeding at 10 and 30 s, respectively. After this, the contribution of became increasingly more predominant: being responsible to an estimated 64% of the speeding at 90 s, which rose to 100% by 180 s. This suggests that, while both CO and clearly interact to determine the response, the speeding of kinetics by prior high-intensity KE exercise is predominantly attributable to increases in . |
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Keywords: | High-intensity exercise Cardiac output Arteriovenous O2 content difference |
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