Ellerby David J, Henry Havalee T, Carr Jennifer A, Buchanan Cindy I, Marsh Richard L
Department of Biology, Northeastern University, 360 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
J Physiol. 2005 Apr 15;564(Pt 2):631-48. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2005.082974. Epub 2005 Feb 24.
Running and walking are mechanically complex activities. Leg muscles must exert forces to support weight and provide stability, do work to accelerate the limbs and body centre of mass, and absorb work to act as brakes. Current understanding of energy use during legged locomotion has been limited by the lack of measurements of energy use by individual muscles. Our study is based on the correlation between blood flow and aerobic energy expenditure in active skeletal muscle during locomotion. This correlation is strongly supported by the available evidence concerning control of blood flow to active muscle, and the relationship between blood flow and the rate of muscle oxygen consumption. We used injectable microspheres to measure the blood flow to the hind-limb muscles, and other body tissues, in guinea fowl (Numida meleagris) at rest, and across a range of walking and running speeds. Combined with data concerning the various mechanical functions of the leg muscles, this approach has enabled the first direct estimates of the energetic costs of some of these functions. Cardiac output increased from 350 ml min(-1) at rest, to 1700 ml min(-1) at a running speed ( approximately 2.6 m s(-1)) eliciting a of 90% of . The increase in cardiac output was achieved via approximately equal factorial increases in heart rate and stroke volume. Approximately 90% of the increased cardiac output was directed to the active muscles of the hind limbs, without redistribution of blood flow from the viscera. Values of mass-specific blood flow to the ventricles, approximately 15 ml min(-1) g(-1), and one of the hind-limb muscles, approximately 9 ml min(-1) g(-1), were the highest yet recorded for blood flow to active muscle. The patterns of increasing blood flow with increasing speed varied greatly among different muscles. The increases in flow correlated with the likely fibre type distribution of the muscles. Muscles expected to have many high-oxidative fibres preferentially increased flow at low exercise intensities. We estimated substantial energetic costs associated with swinging the limbs, co-contraction to stabilize the knee and work production by the hind-limb muscles. Our data provide a basis for evaluating hypotheses relating the mechanics and energetics of legged locomotion.
跑步和行走是机械复杂的活动。腿部肌肉必须施加力来支撑体重并提供稳定性,做功使肢体和身体质心加速,以及吸收功起到刹车作用。目前对有腿运动过程中能量利用的理解因缺乏对单个肌肉能量利用的测量而受到限制。我们的研究基于运动过程中活跃骨骼肌的血流与有氧能量消耗之间的相关性。关于向活跃肌肉的血流控制以及血流与肌肉耗氧率之间的关系,现有证据有力地支持了这种相关性。我们使用可注射的微球体来测量珍珠鸡(Numida meleagris)在休息时以及一系列行走和跑步速度下后肢肌肉和其他身体组织的血流。结合有关腿部肌肉各种机械功能的数据,这种方法首次直接估算了其中一些功能的能量消耗。心输出量从休息时的350毫升/分钟增加到跑步速度(约2.6米/秒)时的1700毫升/分钟,此时的代谢率达到最大代谢率的90%。心输出量的增加是通过心率和每搏输出量大致相等的阶乘增加实现的。增加的心输出量中约90%流向后肢的活跃肌肉,而内脏的血流没有重新分配。心室的质量比血流值约为15毫升/分钟·克-1,后肢肌肉之一的质量比血流值约为9毫升/分钟·克-1,是流向活跃肌肉的血流中记录到的最高值。不同肌肉中血流随速度增加的模式差异很大。血流的增加与肌肉可能的纤维类型分布相关。预计具有许多高氧化纤维的肌肉在低运动强度下优先增加血流。我们估计了与摆动肢体、共同收缩以稳定膝盖以及后肢肌肉做功相关的大量能量消耗。我们的数据为评估有关有腿运动的力学和能量学的假设提供了基础。