Morozova Ekaterina, Yoo Yeonjoo, Behrouzvaziri Abolhassan, Zaretskaia Maria, Rusyniak Daniel, Zaretsky Dmitry, Molkov Yaroslav
Department of Physics, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana.
Department of Mathematical Sciences, Indiana University - Purdue University Indianapolis, Indiana.
Physiol Rep. 2016 Sep;4(17). doi: 10.14814/phy2.12955.
Athletes use amphetamines to improve their performance through largely unknown mechanisms. Considering that body temperature is one of the major determinants of exhaustion during exercise, we investigated the influence of amphetamine on the thermoregulation. To explore this, we measured core body temperature and oxygen consumption of control and amphetamine-trea ted rats running on a treadmill with an incrementally increasing load (both speed and incline). Experimental results showed that rats treated with amphetamine (2 mg/kg) were able to run significantly longer than control rats. Due to a progressively increasing workload, which was matched by oxygen consumption, the control group exhibited a steady increase in the body temperature. The administration of amphetamine slowed down the temperature rise (thus decreasing core body temperature) in the beginning of the run without affecting oxygen consumption. In contrast, a lower dose of amphetamine (1 mg/kg) had no effect on measured parameters. Using a mathematical model describing temperature dynamics in two compartments (the core and the muscles), we were able to infer what physiological parameters were affected by amphetamine. Modeling revealed that amphetamine administration increases heat dissipation in the core. Furthermore, the model predicted that the muscle temperature at the end of the run in the amphetamine-treated group was significantly higher than in the control group. Therefore, we conclude that amphetamine may mask or delay fatigue by slowing down exercise-induced core body temperature growth by increasing heat dissipation. However, this affects the integrity of thermoregulatory system and may result in potentially dangerous overheating of the muscles.
运动员使用苯丙胺来提高成绩,但其作用机制大多未知。鉴于体温是运动疲劳的主要决定因素之一,我们研究了苯丙胺对体温调节的影响。为了探究这一点,我们测量了在跑步机上以逐渐增加负荷(速度和坡度)跑步的对照组和苯丙胺处理组大鼠的核心体温和耗氧量。实验结果表明,用苯丙胺(2毫克/千克)处理的大鼠比对照组大鼠能显著跑得更长时间。由于工作量逐渐增加,耗氧量与之匹配,对照组的体温稳步上升。在跑步开始时,苯丙胺的给药减缓了体温上升(从而降低了核心体温),而不影响耗氧量。相比之下,较低剂量的苯丙胺(1毫克/千克)对测量参数没有影响。使用描述两个隔室(核心和肌肉)温度动态的数学模型,我们能够推断出哪些生理参数受到了苯丙胺的影响。模型显示,苯丙胺的给药增加了核心的散热。此外,该模型预测,苯丙胺处理组跑步结束时的肌肉温度显著高于对照组。因此,我们得出结论,苯丙胺可能通过增加散热来减缓运动引起的核心体温上升,从而掩盖或延迟疲劳。然而,这会影响体温调节系统的完整性,并可能导致肌肉潜在的危险过热。