Literature DB >> 16775741

Substrate utilization during prolonged exercise with ingestion of (13)C-glucose in acute hypobaric hypoxia (4,300 m).

F Péronnet1, D Massicotte, N Folch, B Melin, N Koulmann, C Jimenez, L Bourdon, J-C Launay, G Savourey.   

Abstract

Energy substrate oxidation was measured using indirect respiratory calorimetry combined with tracer technique in five healthy young male subjects, during a 80-min exercise period on ergocycle with ingestion of 140 g of (13)C-labelled glucose, in normoxia and acute hypobaric hypoxia (445 mmHg or 4,300 m), at the same relative [77% V(.-)((O)(2)(max))] and absolute workload (161+/-8 W, corresponding to 77 and 54% V(.-)((O)(2)(max)) in hypoxia and normoxia). The oxidation rate of exogenous glucose was not significantly different in the three experimental situations: 21.4+/-2.9, 20.2+/-1.2 and 17.2+/-0.6 g over the last 40 min of exercise at approximately 77 and approximately 54% V(.-)((O)(2)(max)) in normoxia and in hypoxia, respectively, providing 12.5+/-1.5, 16.8+/-1.1 and 14.9+/-1.1% of the energy yield, although ingestion of glucose during exercise resulted in a higher plasma glucose concentration in hypoxia than normoxia. The contribution of carbohydrate (CHO) oxidation to the energy yield was significantly higher in hypoxia (92.0+/-2.1%) than in normoxia for both a given absolute (75.3+/-5.2%) and relative workload (78.1+/-1.8%). This greater reliance on CHO oxidation in hypoxia was entirely due to the significantly larger contribution of endogenous glucose oxidation to the energy yield: 75.9+/-1.7% versus 66.6+/-3.3 and 55.2+/-3.7% in normoxia at the same relative and absolute workload.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16775741     DOI: 10.1007/s00421-006-0164-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Appl Physiol        ISSN: 1439-6319            Impact factor:   3.078


  35 in total

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2.  Oral [(13)C]glucose and endogenous energy substrate oxidation during prolonged treadmill running.

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5.  From plant physiology to human metabolic investigations.

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6.  Influence of carbohydrate ingestion on fuel substrate turnover and oxidation during prolonged exercise.

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Authors:  G A Brooks; E E Wolfel; B M Groves; P R Bender; G E Butterfield; A Cymerman; R S Mazzeo; J R Sutton; R R Wolfe; J T Reeves
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Journal:  J Appl Physiol Respir Environ Exerc Physiol       Date:  1982-12

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  13 in total

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Review 4.  The effects of environmental hypoxia on substrate utilisation during exercise: a meta-analysis.

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7.  Acute Normobaric Hypoxia Increases Post-exercise Lipid Oxidation in Healthy Males.

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9.  Altitude Acclimatization Alleviates the Hypoxia-Induced Suppression of Exogenous Glucose Oxidation During Steady-State Aerobic Exercise.

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10.  Effects of an Acute Pilates Program under Hypoxic Conditions on Vascular Endothelial Function in Pilates Participants: A Randomized Crossover Trial.

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