Literature DB >> 15004212

Brain and central haemodynamics and oxygenation during maximal exercise in humans.

José González-Alonso1, Mads K Dalsgaard, Takuya Osada, Stefanos Volianitis, Ellen A Dawson, Chie C Yoshiga, Niels H Secher.   

Abstract

During maximal exercise in humans, fatigue is preceded by reductions in systemic and skeletal muscle blood flow, O(2) delivery and uptake. Here, we examined whether the uptake of O(2) and substrates by the human brain is compromised and whether the fall in stroke volume of the heart underlying the decline in systemic O(2) delivery is related to declining venous return. We measured brain and central haemodynamics and oxygenation in healthy males (n= 13 in 2 studies) performing intense cycling exercise (360 +/- 10 W; mean +/-s.e.m.) to exhaustion starting with either high (H) or normal (control, C) body temperature. Time to exhaustion was shorter in H than in C (5.8 +/- 0.2 versus 7.5 +/- 0.4 min, P < 0.05), despite heart rate reaching similar maximal values. During the first 90 s of both trials, frontal cortex tissue oxygenation and the arterial-internal jugular venous differences (a-v diff) for O(2) and glucose did not change, whereas middle cerebral artery mean flow velocity (MCA V(mean)) and cardiac output increased by approximately 22 and approximately 115%, respectively. Thereafter, brain extraction of O(2), glucose and lactate increased by approximately 45, approximately 55 and approximately 95%, respectively, while frontal cortex tissue oxygenation, MCA V(mean) and cardiac output declined approximately 40, approximately 15 and approximately 10%, respectively. At exhaustion in both trials, systemic VO(2) declined in parallel with a similar fall in stroke volume and central venous pressure; yet the brain uptake of O(2), glucose and lactate increased. In conclusion, the reduction in stroke volume, which underlies the fall in systemic O(2) delivery and uptake before exhaustion, is partly related to reductions in venous return to the heart. Furthermore, fatigue during maximal exercise, with or without heat stress, in healthy humans is associated with an enhanced rather than impaired brain uptake of O(2) and substrates.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15004212      PMCID: PMC1665053          DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2004.060574

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Physiol        ISSN: 0022-3751            Impact factor:   5.182


  32 in total

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8.  Cerebral blood flow during submaximal and maximal dynamic exercise in humans.

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9.  Internal carotid flow velocity with exercise before and after acclimatization to 4,300 m.

Authors:  S Y Huang; K W Tawney; P R Bender; B M Groves; R E McCullough; R G McCullough; A J Micco; M Manco-Johnson; A Cymerman; E R Greene
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Review 4.  Regulation of increased blood flow (hyperemia) to muscles during exercise: a hierarchy of competing physiological needs.

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6.  Hyperthermia: a failure of the motor cortex and the muscle.

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7.  Changes in the functional MR signal in motor and non-motor areas during intermittent fatiguing hand exercise.

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8.  Effects of heat and cold stress on central vascular pressure relationships during orthostasis in humans.

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10.  Hyperthermia impairs brain, heart and muscle function in exercising humans.

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