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Influence of repeated isometric contractions on muscle deoxygenation and pulmonary oxygen uptake kinetics in humans
Author(s) -
Bringard Aurélien,
Perrey Stéphane
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
clinical physiology and functional imaging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.608
H-Index - 67
eISSN - 1475-097X
pISSN - 1475-0961
DOI - 10.1111/j.1475-097x.2004.00554.x
Subject(s) - deoxygenation , medicine , isometric exercise , cardiology , heart rate , oxygenation , vastus lateralis muscle , perfusion , skeletal muscle , anesthesia , chemistry , blood pressure , biochemistry , catalysis
Summary The purpose of the present study was to compare simultaneously vastus lateralis (VL) deoxygenation and pulmonary O 2 uptake (O 2 ) kinetics during fatiguing knee extension exercise with minimal cardiac load. Eight healthy subjects realized an intermittent bilateral knee‐extension exercise (3‐s contraction/3‐s relaxation) at 40% of maximum voluntary contraction for 10 min. VL deoxygenation was recorded by near infrared spectroscopy at 2 Hz (NIRO‐300, Hamamatsu Photonics, Japan) and O 2 was determined breath‐by‐breath (K4b 2 , Cosmed, Italy). After a time delay of 16 ± 5 s, deoxygenation kinetics at the onset of exercise followed an exponential time course at a significant faster rate than O 2 (time constant of 5·4 ± 4·0 s vs. 31·6 ± 10·4 s, P <0·01) reflecting a mismatch between local O 2 consumption and perfusion. Thereafter, a rise in O 2 of 223 ± 123 ml min −1 (consistent with the mathematical model, 259 ± 126 ml min −1 ) was observed between minutes 2 and 10. During the same exercise time, changes in tissue oxygenation index decreased significantly and were individually correlated with the corresponding increased O 2 ( P <0·05), suggesting that the majority of the slow rise of O 2 arose from the exercising limbs. Averaged heart rate increased from 67 ± 11 to 116 ± 20 beats min −1 during exercise. Knee extension exercise may be relevant to estimate the cardiopulmonary and deoxygenation of working skeletal muscle responses for assessment of exercise limiting factors in clinical settings or in the exercise physiology.