INFLUENCE OF ENDURANCE TRAINING AND CATECHOLAMINES ON EXERCISE VO2 RESPONSE

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作者
GAESSER, GA
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关键词
OXYGEN UPTAKE; VENTILATION; LACTATE; EPINEPHRINE; BETA-ADRENERGIC SYSTEM;
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G8 [体育];
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04 ; 0403 ;
摘要
For constant-load, heavy exercise (i.e., above the lactate threshold (T-Lac)), a slow component of oxygen uptake (VO2) is observed. Endurance training reduces the magnitude of the slow component and, hence, end-exercise VO2. Reductions in exercise VO2 have been reported after 7-8 wk of training; unpublished observations suggest that the VO2 slow component may be attenuated after just 2 wk of training. A minimum training intensity for eliciting reductions in constant-load exercise VO2 has not been established; however, in the elderly, training at an intensity below T-Lac resulted in similar reductions in exercise VO2 as did training above T-Lac. Mechanisms responsible for the reduced slow component of VO2 after training remain to be firmly established. Evidence both for and against blood lactate concentration ([L(-)]) as a mediator of the slow component has been published; high correlations between [L(-)] and the slow component, and between the training-induced reductions in these variables, appear to be more coincidental than causal. Decreased pulmonary ventilation after training may account for between 14% and 30% of the reduction in the slow component of VO2. Epinephrine infusion does not augment exercise VO2, nor does beta-adrenergic blockade diminish the magnitude of the slow component of VO2.
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页码:1341 / 1346
页数:6
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