Literature DB >> 11071046

Lactate concentration in plasma and red blood cells during incremental exercise.

A Hildebrand1, W Lormes, J Emmert, Y Liu, M Lehmann, J M Steinacker.   

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate the distribution of lactate in plasma and red blood cells (RBC) in capillary blood during and after incremental exercise. We measured capillary plasma lactate and whole blood lactate of 10 subjects during incremental treadmill running and the first 20 min of recovery. To minimize lactate exchange from plasma to RBC between sampling and analysis, a recently developed rapid plasma separation method was used. RBC lactate was calculated. The RBC/plasma lactate concentration ratio decreased from 1.0 (0.85-1.28) before to 0.37 (0.25-0.45) after exhaustive exercise (plasma lactate 15.9 (12.2-19.5)mmol x I(-1), RBC lactate 4.8 (4.0-7.0) mmol x 1(-1)), thus showing that capillary plasma lactate increased much more rapidly than intracellular lactate during incremental exercise. In the first 5 minutes of recovery intracellular lactate still rose while plasma lactate already declined. Then both decreased while the concentration ratio as well as the absolute concentration gradient remained nearly constant (ratio 20 min after exercise termination: 0.43 (0.19-0.54).

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11071046     DOI: 10.1055/s-2000-7412

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Sports Med        ISSN: 0172-4622            Impact factor:   3.118


  8 in total

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6.  Warming-Up Affects Performance and Lactate Distribution between Plasma and Red Blood Cells.

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Journal:  J Sports Sci Med       Date:  2010-09-01       Impact factor: 2.988

7.  Erythrocytes as bioreactors to decrease excess ammonium concentration in blood.

Authors:  Eugeniy S Protasov; Daria V Borsakova; Yuliya G Alexandrovich; Anatoliy V Korotkov; Elena A Kosenko; Andrey A Butylin; Fazoil I Ataullakhanov; Elena I Sinauridze
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2019-02-06       Impact factor: 4.379

8.  Including metabolite concentrations into flux balance analysis: thermodynamic realizability as a constraint on flux distributions in metabolic networks.

Authors:  Andreas Hoppe; Sabrina Hoffmann; Hermann-Georg Holzhütter
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  8 in total

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