Wong Jeremy D, O'Connor Shawn M, Selinger Jessica C, Donelan J Maxwell
Department of Biomedical Physiology and Kinesiology, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada
Department of Biomedical Physiology and Kinesiology, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada.
J Neurophysiol. 2017 Aug 1;118(2):1425-1433. doi: 10.1152/jn.00195.2017. Epub 2017 Jun 21.
People can adapt their gait to minimize energetic cost, indicating that walking's neural control has access to ongoing measurements of the body's energy use. In this study we tested the hypothesis that an important source of energetic cost measurements arises from blood gas receptors that are sensitive to O and CO concentrations. These receptors are known to play a role in regulating other physiological processes related to energy consumption, such as ventilation rate. Given the role of O and CO in oxidative metabolism, sensing their levels can provide an accurate estimate of the body's total energy use. To test our hypothesis, we simulated an added energetic cost for blood gas receptors that depended on a subject's step frequency and determined if subjects changed their behavior in response to this simulated cost. These energetic costs were simulated by controlling inspired gas concentrations to decrease the circulating levels of O and increase CO We found this blood gas control to be effective at shifting the step frequency that minimized the ventilation rate and perceived exertion away from the normally preferred frequency, indicating that these receptors provide the nervous system with strong physiological and psychological signals. However, rather than adapt their preferred step frequency toward these lower simulated costs, subjects persevered at their normally preferred frequency even after extensive experience with the new simulated costs. These results suggest that blood gas receptors play a negligible role in sensing energetic cost for the purpose of optimizing gait. Human gait adaptation implies that the nervous system senses energetic cost, yet this signal is unknown. We tested the hypothesis that the blood gas receptors sense cost for gait optimization by controlling blood O and CO with step frequency as people walked. At the simulated energetic minimum, ventilation and perceived exertion were lowest, yet subjects preferred walking at their original frequency. This suggests that blood gas receptors are not critical for sensing cost during gait.
人们可以调整自己的步态以将能量消耗降至最低,这表明行走的神经控制能够获取身体能量使用情况的实时测量数据。在本研究中,我们检验了这样一个假设:能量消耗测量的一个重要来源是对氧气和二氧化碳浓度敏感的血气感受器。已知这些感受器在调节与能量消耗相关的其他生理过程(如呼吸频率)中发挥作用。鉴于氧气和二氧化碳在氧化代谢中的作用,感知它们的水平可以准确估计身体的总能量使用情况。为了检验我们的假设,我们模拟了一种取决于受试者步频的额外能量消耗,并确定受试者是否会因这种模拟的能量消耗而改变其行为。通过控制吸入气体浓度以降低氧气的循环水平并增加二氧化碳来模拟这些能量消耗。我们发现这种血气控制有效地改变了使呼吸频率和感知运动强度最小化的步频,使其偏离正常偏好的频率,这表明这些感受器为神经系统提供了强烈的生理和心理信号。然而,受试者并没有将他们偏好的步频调整到这些较低的模拟能量消耗状态,即使在对新的模拟能量消耗有了广泛体验之后,他们仍然坚持正常偏好的频率。这些结果表明,血气感受器在为优化步态而感知能量消耗方面所起的作用微不足道。人类步态适应性意味着神经系统能够感知能量消耗,但这种信号尚不清楚。我们检验了这样一个假设:在人们行走时,血气感受器通过控制血液中的氧气和二氧化碳与步频的关系来感知能量消耗以优化步态。在模拟的能量消耗最小值时,呼吸和感知运动强度最低,但受试者仍偏好以他们原来的频率行走。这表明血气感受器在步态过程中感知能量消耗方面并非至关重要。