Effect of inspiratory muscle work on peripheral fatigue of locomotor muscles in healthy humans
The work of breathing required during maximal exercise compromises blood flow to limb locomotor muscles and reduces exercise performance. We asked if force output of the inspiratory muscles affected exercise-induced peripheral fatigue of locomotor muscles. Eight male cyclists exercised at ⥠90% pe...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of physiology 2006-03, Vol.571 (2), p.425-439 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The work of breathing required during maximal exercise compromises blood flow to limb locomotor muscles and reduces exercise
performance. We asked if force output of the inspiratory muscles affected exercise-induced peripheral fatigue of locomotor
muscles. Eight male cyclists exercised at ⥠90% peak O 2 uptake to exhaustion (CTRL). On a separate occasion, subjects exercised for the same duration and power output as CTRL (13.2
± 0.9 min, 292 W), but force output of the inspiratory muscles was reduced (â56% versus CTRL) using a proportional assist ventilator (PAV). Subjects also exercised to exhaustion (7.9 ± 0.6 min, 292 W) while force
output of the inspiratory muscles was increased (+80% versus CTRL) via inspiratory resistive loads (IRLs), and again for the same duration and power output with breathing unimpeded (IRL-CTRL).
Quadriceps twitch force ( Q tw ), in response to supramaximal paired magnetic stimuli of the femoral nerve (1â100 Hz), was assessed pre- and at 2.5 through
to 70 min postexercise. Immediately after CTRL exercise, Q tw was reduced â28 ± 5% below pre-exercise baseline and this reduction was attenuated following PAV exercise (â20 ± 5%; P < 0.05). Conversely, increasing the force output of the inspiratory muscles (IRL) exacerbated exercise-induced quadriceps
muscle fatigue ( Q tw =â12 ± 8% IRL-CTRL versus â20 ± 7% IRL; P < 0.05). Repeat studies between days showed that the effects of exercise per se , and of superimposed inspiratory muscle loading on quadriceps fatigue were highly reproducible. In conclusion, peripheral
fatigue of locomotor muscles resulting from high-intensity sustained exercise is, in part, due to the accompanying high levels
of respiratory muscle work. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.2005.099697 |