Kinetics of estimated human muscle capillary blood flow during recovery from exercise

Leonardo F Ferreira, Allison J Harper, Dana K Townsend, Barbara J Lutjemeier, Thomas J Barstow, Leonardo F Ferreira, Allison J Harper, Dana K Townsend, Barbara J Lutjemeier, Thomas J Barstow

Abstract

The kinetic characteristics of muscle capillary blood flow (Qcap) during recovery from exercise are controversial (e.g. one versus two phases). Furthermore, it is not clear how the overall Qcap kinetics are temporally associated with muscle oxygen uptake (VO2m) kinetics. To address these issues, we examined the kinetics of Qcap estimated from the rearrangement of the Fick equation (Qcap=VO2m/C(a-v)O2) using the kinetics of pulmonary VO2 (VO2p, primary component) and deoxy-haemoglobin concentration ([HHb]) as indices of VO2m and C(a - v)O2 (arterio-venous oxygen difference) kinetics, respectively. VO2p (l min-1) was measured breath by breath and [HHb] (microm) was measured by near infrared spectroscopy during moderate (M; below lactate threshold, LT) and heavy exercise (H, above LT) in nine subjects. The kinetics of Qcap were biphasic, with an initial fast phase (tauI; M=9.3+/-4.9 s and H=6.0+/-3.8 s) followed by a slower phase 2 (tauP; M=29.9+/-8.6 s and H=47.7+/-26.0 s). For moderate exercise, the overall kinetics of Qcap (mean response time [MRT], 36.1+/-8.6 s) were significantly slower than the kinetics of VO2p (tauP; 27.8+/-5.3 s) and [HHb] (MRT for [HHb]; 16.2+/-6.3 s). However, for heavy exercise, there was no significant difference between MRT-[HHb] (34.7+/-10.4 s) and tauP for VO2p (32.3+/-6.7 s), while MRT for Qcap (48.7+/-21.8 s) was significantly slower than MRT for [HHb] and tauP for VO2p. In conclusion, during recovery from exercise the estimated Qcap kinetics were biphasic, showing an early rapid decrease in blood flow. In addition, the overall kinetics of Qcap were slower than the estimated VO2m kinetics.

Source: PubMed

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