| Literature DB >> 27659351 |
Alessandra Adami1, Robert Cao2, Janos Porszasz3, Richard Casaburi4, Harry B Rossiter5.
Abstract
Low muscle oxidative capacity contributes to exercise intolerance in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) allows non-invasive determination of the muscle oxygen consumption (mV̇O2) recovery rate constant (k), which is proportional to oxidative capacity assuming two conditions are met: 1) exercise intensity is sufficient to fully-activate mitochondrial oxidative enzymes; 2) sufficient O2 availability. We aimed to determine reproducibility (coefficient of variation, CV; intraclass correlation coefficient, ICC) of NIRS k assessment in the gastrocnemius of 64 participants with (FEV1 64±23%predicted) or without COPD (FEV1 98±14%predicted). 10-15s dynamic contractions preceded 6min of intermittent arterial occlusions (5-10s each, ∼250mmHg) for k measurement. k was lower (P<0.05) in COPD (1.43±0.4min-1; CV=9.8±5.9%, ICC=0.88) than controls (1.74±0.69min-1; CV=9.9±8.4%; ICC=0.93). Poor k reproducibility was more common when post-contraction mV̇O2 and deoxygenation were low, suggesting insufficient exercise intensity for mitochondrial activation and/or the NIRS signal contained little light reflected from active muscle. The NIRS assessment was well tolerated and reproducible for muscle dysfunction evaluation in COPD. Copyright ÂEntities:
Keywords: Exercise intolerance; Kinetics; Mitochondria; Oxygen consumption; Quality-control; Skeletal muscle
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27659351 PMCID: PMC5136338 DOI: 10.1016/j.resp.2016.09.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Physiol Neurobiol ISSN: 1569-9048 Impact factor: 1.931