Langsetmo I, Poole D C
Departments of Anatomy and Physiology and Kinesiology, Kansas State University, Manhattan, Kansas 66502-5602, USA.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 1999 Apr;86(4):1170-7. doi: 10.1152/jappl.1999.86.4.1170.
At the onset of exercise, horses exhibit O2 uptake (VO2) kinetics that are qualitatively similar to those of humans. In humans, there is a marked dissymmetry between on- and off-kinetics for VO2. This investigation sought to formally characterize the off-transient (recovery) VO2 kinetics in the horse within the moderate (M), heavy (H), and severe (S) exercise domains. Six horses were run on a high-speed treadmill at M, H, and S exercise intensities (i.e., that speed which yielded approximately 50, 85, 100% peak VO2, respectively, on the maximal incremental test). The time courses for the recovery were modeled by using a three-phase model with a single-exponential (fast component) or double-exponential (fast and slow component) phase 2. The single-exponential phase 2 model provided an excellent fit to the off-transient data, with the exception of one horse in the H domain which was best modeled by a double exponential. The time delay elicited no domain dependency (M, 18.0 +/- 1.0; H, 17.6 +/- 1.1; S, 17.8 +/- 2.0 s; P > 0.05), as was the case for the fast-component time constants (M, 16.3 +/- 2.0 s; H, 13.5 +/- 1.0 s; S, 14.6 +/- 0.3 s; P > 0.05). In the H and S (but not M) domains, the VO2 following resolution of the fast component was elevated above the preexercise baseline (H, 3.0 +/- 1.0 l/min; S, 5.7 +/- 1.1 l/min). This additional postexercise VO2 was correlated to the end-exercise increase in lactate (r = 0.94, P < 0.001) but not the end-exercise pulmonary arterial blood temperature (r = 0.45, P > 0.05). These data indicate that the time delay and subsequent kinetic response of the primary (fast-component) phase of exercise VO2 recovery in the horse is independent of the preceding exercise-intensity domain. However, in the H and S domains, the fast component resolves to an elevated baseline.
在运动开始时,马的氧气摄取量(VO₂)动力学在性质上与人类相似。在人类中,VO₂的开启和关闭动力学之间存在明显的不对称性。本研究旨在正式描述马在中度(M)、重度(H)和极重度(S)运动范围内的关闭瞬态(恢复)VO₂动力学。六匹马在高速跑步机上以M、H和S运动强度奔跑(即在最大递增测试中分别产生约50%、85%、100%峰值VO₂的速度)。恢复的时间进程通过使用具有单指数(快速成分)或双指数(快速和慢速成分)第二阶段的三相模型进行建模。单指数第二阶段模型对关闭瞬态数据拟合良好,但H组中有一匹马除外,该匹马最好用双指数模型建模。时间延迟没有显示出运动强度范围依赖性(M组,18.0±1.0秒;H组,17.6±1.1秒;S组,17.8±2.0秒;P>0.05),快速成分时间常数也是如此(M组,16.3±2.0秒;H组,13.5±1.0秒;S组,14.6±0.3秒;P>0.05)。在H和S组(但不是M组)运动强度范围内,快速成分消退后的VO₂高于运动前基线(H组,3.0±1.0升/分钟;S组,5.7±1.1升/分钟)。运动后这一额外的VO₂与运动结束时乳酸的增加相关(r=0.94,P<0.001),但与运动结束时肺动脉血温度无关(r=0.45,P>0.05)。这些数据表明,马运动VO₂恢复的主要(快速成分)阶段的时间延迟和随后的动力学反应与之前的运动强度范围无关。然而,在H和S组运动强度范围内,快速成分消退后基线升高。