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- Laaksonen, Marko, 1975-, et al.
(författare)
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Perfusion heterogeneity does not explain excess muscle oxygen uptake during variable intensity exercise
- 2010
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Ingår i: Clinical Physiology and Functional Imaging. - 1475-0961 .- 1475-097X. ; 30:4, s. 241-249
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Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
- The association between muscle oxygen uptake (VO2) and perfusion or perfusion heterogeneity (relative dispersion, RD) was studied in eight healthy male subjects during intermittent isometric (1 s on, 2 s off) one-legged knee-extension exercise at variable intensities using positron emission tomography and a-v blood sampling. Resistance during the first 6 min of exercise was 50% of maximal isometric voluntary contraction force (MVC) (HI-1), followed by 6 min at 10% MVC (LOW) and finishing with 6 min at 50% MVC (HI-2). Muscle perfusion and O2 delivery during HI-1 (26 ± 5 and 5·4 ± 1·0 ml 100 g−1 min−1) and HI-2 (28 ± 4 and 5·8 ± 0·7 ml 100 g−1 min−1) were similar, but both were higher (P<0·01) than during LOW (15 ± 3 and 3·0 ± 0·6 ml 100 g−1 min−1). Muscle VO2 was also higher during both HI workloads (HI-1 3·3 ± 0·4 and HI-2 4·1 ± 0·6 ml 100 g−1 min−1) than LOW (1·4 ± 0·4 ml 100 g−1 min−1; P<0·01) and 25% higher during HI-2 than HI-1 (P<0·05). O2 extraction was higher during HI workloads (HI-1 62 ± 7 and HI-2 70 ± 7%) than LOW (45 ± 8%; P<0·01). O2 extraction tended to be higher (P = 0·08) during HI-2 when compared to HI-1. Perfusion was less heterogeneous (P<0·05) during HI workloads when compared to LOW with no difference between HI workloads. Thus, during one-legged knee-extension exercise at variable intensities, skeletal muscle perfusion and O2 delivery are unchanged between high-intensity workloads, whereas muscle VO2 is increased during the second high-intensity workload. Perfusion heterogeneity cannot explain this discrepancy between O2 delivery and uptake. We propose that the excess muscle VO2 during the second high-intensity workload is derived from working muscle cells.
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