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长期暴露于微重力环境下的肺活量、呼吸肌力量和肺气体交换。

Vital capacity, respiratory muscle strength, and pulmonary gas exchange during long-duration exposure to microgravity.

作者信息

Prisk G Kim, Fine Janelle M, Cooper Trevor K, West John B

机构信息

Div. of Physiology, Dept. of Medicine, Univ. of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Dr., La Jolla, CA 92093-0931, USA.

出版信息

J Appl Physiol (1985). 2006 Aug;101(2):439-47. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.01419.2005. Epub 2006 Apr 6.

Abstract

Extended exposure to microgravity (microG) is known to reduce strength in weight-bearing muscles and was also reported to reduce respiratory muscle strength. Short- duration exposure to microG reduces vital capacity (VC), a surrogate measure for respiratory muscle strength, for the first few days, with little change in O2 uptake, ventilation, or end-tidal partial pressures. Accordingly we measured VC, maximum inspiratory and expiratory pressures, and indexes of pulmonary gas exchange in 10 normal subjects (9 men, 1 woman, 39-52 yr) who lived on the International Space Station for 130-196 days in a normoxic, normobaric atmosphere. Subjects were studied four times in the standing and supine postures preflight at sea level at 1 G, approximately monthly in microG, and multiple times postflight. VC in microG was essentially unchanged compared with preflight standing [5.28 +/- 0.08 liters (mean +/- SE), n = 187; 5.24 +/- 0.09, n = 117, respectively; P = 0.03] and considerably greater than that measured supine in 1G (4.96 +/- 0.10, n = 114, P < 0.001). There was a trend for VC to decrease after the first 2 mo of microG, but there were no changes postflight. Maximum respiratory pressures in microG were generally intermediate to those standing and supine in 1G, and importantly they showed no decrease with time spent in microG. O2 uptake and CO2 production were reduced (approximately 12%) in extended microG, but inhomogeneity in the lung was not different compared with short-duration exposure to microG. The results show that VC is essentially unchanged and respiratory muscle strength is maintained during extended exposure to microG, and metabolic rate is reduced.

摘要

已知长时间暴露于微重力环境会降低负重肌肉的力量,也有报道称会降低呼吸肌力量。短时间暴露于微重力环境会在最初几天降低肺活量(VC),这是呼吸肌力量的一项替代指标,而氧摄取、通气或呼气末分压变化不大。因此,我们测量了10名正常受试者(9名男性,1名女性,年龄39 - 52岁)的肺活量、最大吸气和呼气压力以及肺气体交换指标,这些受试者在国际空间站的常氧、常压环境中生活了130 - 196天。在海平面1G重力下,受试者在飞行前站立和仰卧姿势下进行了4次研究,大约每月在微重力环境下进行一次研究,飞行后进行了多次研究。与飞行前站立时相比,微重力环境下的肺活量基本没有变化[分别为5.28±0.08升(平均值±标准误),n = 187;5.24±0.09,n = 117;P = 0.03],且明显大于在1G重力下仰卧时测量的肺活量(4.96±0.10,n = 114,P < 0.001)。在微重力环境下的前2个月后,肺活量有下降趋势,但飞行后没有变化。微重力环境下的最大呼吸压力通常介于1G重力下站立和仰卧时的压力之间,重要的是,它们并没有随着在微重力环境下停留时间的增加而降低。在长时间微重力环境下,氧摄取和二氧化碳产生减少(约12%),但与短时间暴露于微重力环境相比,肺部的不均匀性没有差异。结果表明,在长时间暴露于微重力环境期间,肺活量基本不变,呼吸肌力量得以维持,且代谢率降低。

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