| Literature DB >> 24460636 |
Ghanima Al Dandachi, Cécile Londner, Aurore Caumont-Prim, Laurent Plantier, Brigitte Chevalier-Bidaud, Jean-François Toussaint, François-Denis Desgorces, Christophe Delclaux1.
Abstract
It has recently been demonstrated that in healthy individuals, peak oxygen consumption is associated with a greater pulmonary capillary blood volume and a more distensible pulmonary circulation. Our cross-sectional study suggests that, in healthy men aged 20 to 60 years (n = 63), endurance sport practice (vigorous-intensity domain of the International Physical Activity Questionnaire) is associated with better quantity (pulmonary capillary blood volume) and quality (slope of increase in lung diffusion for carbon monoxide on exercise) of the pulmonary vascular bed, partly counterbalancing the deleterious effects of ageing, which remains to be demonstrated in a prospective longitudinal design.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24460636 PMCID: PMC3903017 DOI: 10.1186/1465-9921-15-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Res ISSN: 1465-9921
Figure 1Description of the investigations (experimental protocol). Symptom-limited incremental exercise testing was conducted on an electronically braked cycle ergometer using the Vmax Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing System (Sensor Medics, Yorba Linda, CA). After a 2 min warm-up period (inactive: 30 watts; trained subjects: 50 watts, corresponding to ~15% of ), the workload was increased by 15–30 Watts/minute using a ramp protocol until exhaustion. The single breath DLCO/DLNO measurements were obtained at rest and at two levels of exercise (a first warm-up period was performed before the ramp exercise test, and at 50% of the maximal work rate, immediately after peak exercise acquisition).
Characteristics of the healthy men
| Age, years | 38 [27; 47] | 37 [29; 48] | 39 [25; 46] | 0.574 |
| Height, cm | 179 [173; 185] | 177 [171; 183] | 180 [178; 186] | 0.038 |
| Haemoglobin, g/dL | 14.4 [13.7; 15.0] | 14.4 [13.7; 15.4] | 14.3 [13.7; 14.5] | 0.397 |
| | | | | |
| Sport practice, hours/week | 4.0 [0.0; 8.0] | 0.0 [0.0; 0.0] | 7.0 [5.0; 10.0] | <0.001 |
| Vigorous-intensity domain, MET-min/week | 1200 [0; 3840] | 0 [0; 80] | 3840 [2880; 6300] | <0.001 |
| Total IPAQ score, MET-min/week | 3577 [1105; 7482] | 1099 [684; 2739] | 6943 [3909; 9887] | <0.001 |
| | | | | |
| FEV1,% predicted | 111 [103; 119] | 108 [99; 116] | 113 [105; 122] | 0.137 |
| DLCO, mmol/min/kPa | 10.84 [9.52; 11.68] | 10.51 [8.55; 11.19] | 11.29 [10.21; 12.08] | 0.005 |
| VC, mL | 95 [82; 104] | 89 [76; 99] | 103 [89; 112] | 0.002 |
| DMCO, mmol/min/kPa | 22.53 [21.51; 23.64] | 21.31 [19.80; 22.81] | 23.69 [21.18; 25.67] | 0.019 |
| | | | | |
| DLCO, mmol/min/kPa | 13.42 [12.81; 14.05] | 11.90 [10.67; 13.45] | 14.23 [13.08; 16.08] | 0.001 |
| VC, mL | 125 [117; 132] | 108 [95; 126] | 129 [110; 153] | 0.025 |
| DMCO, mmol/min/kPa | 25.42 [24.31; 26.44] | 23.41 [21.90; 24.92] | 27.33 [25.81; 28.84] | < 0.001 |
| | | | | |
| Exercise duration, min | 640 [589; 721] | 640 [592; 735] | 632 [585; 688] | 0.640 |
| 2932 [2370; 3600] | 2385 [2068; 2671] | 3468 [3181; 3900] | <0.001 | |
| 95 [80; 108] | 80 [68; 93] | 107 [97; 119] | < 0.001 |
#using Mann and Whitney U test.
VC denotes capillary blood volume and DMCO denotes the pulmonary membrane diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide calculated using single breath DLCO/DLNO measurement.
Univariate analyses assessing the factors associated with resting capillary blood volume and slope of DL /work relationship
| | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, years | -0.545 | <0.001 | -0.258 | 0.041 |
| Height, cm | 0.537 | <0.001 | 0.324 | 0.009 |
| Peak | 0.390# | 0.002 | 0.244 | 0.045 |
| Sport practice, hours/week* | 0.360 | 0.006 | 0.278 | 0.034 |
| Vigorous-IPAQ, MET-min/week | 0.356 | 0.004 | 0.264 | 0.036 |
| Total-IPAQ, MET-min/week | 0.116 | 0.364 | 0.218 | 0.086 |
*sports were rowing (=19) triathlon (n = 6) and miscellaneous (n = 7) for the 32 endurance-trained men. The Vigorous-IPAQ domain was clearly related to sport practice duration (r2 = 0.64; p < 0.0001).
#: the Pearson coefficient increased to 0.53 after excluding the two outliers using the Tietjen and Moore method (that is consistent with the r value of 0.60 for the same relationship in the study of Lalande et al. [4]).
Figure 2Factors associated with resting capillary blood volume. The panel A describes the relationship between age (years) and resting capillary blood volume available for gas exchange (VC, mL) in inactive (closed circles) and endurance-trained (open circles) men. A significant relationship is evidenced (see Table 2). The panel B describes the relationship between the vigorous-intensity activity domain of the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (Vigorous-IPAQ) and resting VC. A significant relationship is evidenced (see Table 2). The panel C describes the relationship between resting VC and expressed as raw values, while the panel D describes the relationship between normalized for age and height (expressed as% predicted, see Table fourteen in [12]). The statistical significance of the relationship of panel C is given in Table 2. The significance of the relationship of panel D (r = 0.311, p = 0.013) further suggests that VC is an independent (of age and height) predictor of .