Fuel Selection in Skeletal Muscle Exercising at Low Intensity; Reliance on Carbohydrate in Very Sedentary Individuals
Background: Resting skeletal muscle in insulin resistance prefers to oxidize carbohydrate rather than lipid, exhibiting metabolic inflexibility. Although this is established in resting muscle, complexities involved in directly measuring fuel oxidation using indirect calorimetry across a muscle bed h...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Metabolic syndrome and related disorders 2023-02, Vol.21 (1), p.16-24 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background:
Resting skeletal muscle in insulin resistance prefers to oxidize carbohydrate rather than lipid, exhibiting metabolic inflexibility. Although this is established in resting muscle, complexities involved in directly measuring fuel oxidation using indirect calorimetry across a muscle bed have limited studies of this phenomenon in working skeletal muscle. During mild exercise and at rest, whole-body indirect calorimetry imperfectly estimates muscle fuel oxidation. We provide evidence that a method termed “ΔRER” can reasonably estimate fuel oxidation in skeletal muscle activated by exercise.
Methods:
Completely sedentary volunteers (
n
= 20, age 31 ± 2 years, V̇O
2peak
24.4 ± 1.5 mL O
2
per min/kg) underwent glucose clamps to determine insulin sensitivity and graded exercise consisting of three periods of mild steady-state cycle ergometry (15, 30, 45 watts, or 10%, 20%, and 30% of maximum power) with measurements of whole-body gas exchange. ΔRER, the RER in working muscle, was calculated as (V̇CO2
exercise
–V̇CO
2rest
)/(V̇O
2exercise
– V̇O
2rest
), from which the fraction of fuel accounted for by lipid was estimated.
Results:
Lactate levels were low and stable during steady-state exercise. Muscle biopsies were used to estimate mitochondrial content. The rise of V̇O
2
at onset of exercise followed a monoexponential function, with a time constant of 51 ± 7 sec, typical of skeletal muscle; the average O
2
cost of work was about 12 mL O
2
/watt/min, representing a mechanical efficiency of about 24%. At work rates of 30 or 45 watts, active muscle relied predominantly on carbohydrate, independent of insulin sensitivity within this group of very sedentary volunteers.
Conclusions:
The fraction of muscle fuel oxidation from fat was predicted by power output (
P
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ISSN: | 1540-4196 1557-8518 |
DOI: | 10.1089/met.2022.0062 |