Arterial and venous measurement in resting forearm of metabolic indicators during rest and leg exercise |
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Authors: | J E Nordrehaug A Bj?rkhaug R Danielsen H Vik-Mo |
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Affiliation: | Department of Clinical Physiology, University of Bergen, Norway. |
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Abstract: | We compared the levels of various metabolic indicators in arterial and venous forearm blood during maximal treadmill leg exercise, and the subsequent 9 min in nine volunteers aged 31-56 years. At maximal exercise plasma lactate was 13.2 +/- 3.1 mmol l-1 arterially, while venous was 41% lower, but increased more than arterial after exercise. There was a linear relationship between arterial and venous samples during and after exercise, but not at baseline. Plasma pyruvate increased on the arterial side from 49 +/- 8 to 172 +/- 30 mumol l-1 at maximal exercise, maximal venous was 21% lower. Free fatty acids were not different at rest, but decreased during exercise by 52 and 38% on the arterial and venous side. There was no relationship between arterial and venous levels. Changes in these three variables occurred significantly earlier on the arterial side. Arterial cyclic AMP rose from 97.3 +/- 28.4 to 262.7 +/- 67.5 nmol l-1 from rest to exercise, and was linearly inversely related to the decrease in free fatty acids. The mean venous pH was lower than arterial at rest, but was the same as arterial at maximal exercise and after. Thus, venous plasma lactate and pyruvate, but not free fatty acids, are linearly related to arterial measurements during maximal exercise, while pH is identical. Non-working muscle modifies exercise-induced changes, and therefore venous and arterial forearm blood sampling give more information than either alone. |
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