West Christopher R, Goosey-Tolfrey Victoria L, Campbell Ian G, Romer Lee M
Centre for Sports Medicine and Human Performance, Brunel University, United Kingdom; and.
School of Sport, Exercise & Health Sciences, The Peter Harrison Centre for Disability Sport, Loughborough University, United Kingdom.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2014 Jul 1;117(1):36-45. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00218.2014. Epub 2014 May 22.
We asked whether elastic binding of the abdomen influences respiratory mechanics during wheelchair propulsion in athletes with cervical spinal cord injury (SCI). Eight Paralympic wheelchair rugby players with motor-complete SCI (C5-C7) performed submaximal and maximal incremental exercise tests on a treadmill, both with and without abdominal binding. Measurements included pulmonary function, pressure-derived indices of respiratory mechanics, operating lung volumes, tidal flow-volume data, gas exchange, blood lactate, and symptoms. Residual volume and functional residual capacity were reduced with binding (77 ± 18 and 81 ± 11% of unbound, P < 0.05), vital capacity was increased (114 ± 9%, P < 0.05), whereas total lung capacity was relatively well preserved (99 ± 5%). During exercise, binding introduced a passive increase in transdiaphragmatic pressure, due primarily to an increase in gastric pressure. Active pressures during inspiration were similar across conditions. A sudden, sustained rise in operating lung volumes was evident in the unbound condition, and these volumes were shifted downward with binding. Expiratory flow limitation did not occur in any subject and there was substantial reserve to increase flow and volume in both conditions. V̇o2 was elevated with binding during the final stages of exercise (8-12%, P < 0.05), whereas blood lactate concentration was reduced (16-19%, P < 0.05). V̇o2/heart rate slopes were less steep with binding (62 ± 35 vs. 47 ± 24 ml/beat, P < 0.05). Ventilation, symptoms, and work rates were similar across conditions. The results suggest that abdominal binding shifts tidal breathing to lower lung volumes without influencing flow limitation, symptoms, or exercise tolerance. Changes in respiratory mechanics with binding may benefit O2 transport capacity by an improvement in central circulatory function.
我们探讨了腹部弹性束缚对颈脊髓损伤(SCI)运动员轮椅推进过程中呼吸力学的影响。八名运动完全性SCI(C5 - C7)的残奥会轮椅橄榄球运动员在跑步机上进行了次最大和最大递增运动测试,测试时分别采用腹部束缚和无腹部束缚两种情况。测量指标包括肺功能、呼吸力学的压力衍生指标、工作肺容积、潮气流速 - 容积数据、气体交换、血乳酸和症状。束缚时残气量和功能残气量减少(分别为无束缚时的77±18%和81±11%,P<0.05),肺活量增加(114±9%,P<0.05),而总肺容量相对保持良好(99±5%)。运动期间,束缚导致跨膈压被动增加,主要原因是胃内压升高。吸气时的主动压力在不同情况下相似。在无束缚状态下,工作肺容积出现突然、持续的增加,束缚时这些容积向下移动。所有受试者均未出现呼气流量受限,两种情况下均有大量增加流量和容积的储备。在运动最后阶段,束缚时的摄氧量升高(8 - 12%,P<0.05),而血乳酸浓度降低(16 - 19%,P<0.05)。束缚时摄氧量/心率斜率变缓(62±35 vs. 47±24 ml/次搏动,P<0.05)。不同情况下的通气、症状和工作率相似。结果表明,腹部束缚使潮式呼吸转移至更低的肺容积,而不影响流量限制、症状或运动耐力。束缚引起的呼吸力学变化可能通过改善中心循环功能而有益于氧运输能力。