NO EFFECT OF AEROBIC FITNESS ON EXERCISE-INDUCED DIAPHRAGM FATIGUE IN FEMALES
We tested the hypothesis that the incidence and magnitude of diaphragm fatigue following high-intensity exercise would be lower in females with a high aerobic capacity (Hi-Fit) compared to healthy females with an average aerobic fitness (Avg-Fit). Participants were assigned to groups based on their...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of applied physiology (1985) 2024-11, Vol.137 (5), p.1145-1157 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | We tested the hypothesis that the incidence and magnitude of diaphragm fatigue following high-intensity exercise would be lower in females with a high aerobic capacity (Hi-Fit) compared to healthy females with an average aerobic fitness (Avg-Fit). Participants were assigned to groups based on their peak O
uptake (V̇O
) obtained during cycle exercise: Hi-Fit n=9, V̇O
56.1±3.4 mL·kg
·min
vs. Avg-Fit n=9, V̇O
35.7±4.9 mL·kg
·min
. On a second day, diaphragm fatigue was assessed before and after constant load exercise test to exhaustion. Magnetic stimulation of the phrenic nerve roots was used to non-volitionally assess diaphragm fatigue by measurement of transdiaphragmatic twitch pressure (P
). Both groups exercised at > 90% of V̇O
for a similar duration (Hi-Fit: 546.1 ± 177.8
Avg-Fit: 559.3 ± 175.0 seconds, p = 0.9). Diaphragm fatigue was defined as a
15% reduction in P
, approximately 2 times greater than the coefficient of variation. The mean group average reduction in P
following exercise in the Hi-Fit (17.5%) and Avg-Fit groups (12.2%) was not different between groups (p = 0.2). The Hi-Fit group performed exercise at a higher absolute work rate that elicited significantly greater ventilatory work and inspiratory muscle force output. The Hi-Fit group did not experience greater fatigue compared to the Avg-Fit group, which we attribute to a greater reliance on accessory respiratory muscle recruitment, to training-induced increases in the aerobic capacity of the diaphragm, or a combination of the two. In summary, aerobic fitness is not predictive of exercise-induced diaphragm fatigue in healthy females. |
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ISSN: | 8750-7587 1522-1601 1522-1601 |
DOI: | 10.1152/japplphysiol.00239.2024 |