Faculty of Health and Social Sciences, Molde University College, Molde, Norway.
Department of Circulation and Medical Imaging, Faculty of Medicine, Norwegian University of Science and Technology , Trondheim , Norway.
Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2018 Apr 1;314(4):H853-H862. doi: 10.1152/ajpheart.00435.2017. Epub 2017 Dec 29.
Maximal strength training (MST) improves work efficiency. However, since blood flow is greatly dictated by muscle contractions in arms during exercise and vascular conductance is lower, it has been indicated that arms rely more upon adapting oxygen extraction than legs in response to the enhanced work efficiency. Thus, to investigate if metabolic and vascular responses are arm specific, we used Doppler-ultrasound and a catheter placed in the subclavian vein to measure blood flow and the arteriovenous oxygen difference during steady-state work in seven young men [24 ± 3 (SD) yr] following 6 wk of handgrip MST. As expected, MST improved maximal strength (49 ± 9 to 62 ± 10 kg) and the rate of force development (923 ± 224 to 1,086 ± 238 N/s), resulting in a reduced submaximal oxygen uptake (30 ± 9 to 24 ± 10 ml/min) and concomitantly increased work efficiency (9.3 ± 2.5 to 12.4 ± 3.9%) (all P < 0.05). In turn, the work efficiency improvement was associated with reduced blood flow (486 ± 102 to 395 ± 114 ml/min), mediated by a lower blood velocity (43 ± 8 to 32 ± 6 cm/s) (all P < 0.05). Conduit artery diameter and the arteriovenous oxygen difference remained unaltered. The maximal work test revealed an increased time to exhaustion (949 ± 239 to 1,102 ± 292 s) and maximal work rate (both P < 0.05) but no change in peak oxygen uptake. In conclusion, despite prior indications of metabolic and vascular limb-specific differences, these results reveal that improved work efficiency after small muscle mass strength training in the upper extremities is accompanied by a blood flow reduction and coheres with what has been documented for lower extremities. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Maximal strength training increases skeletal muscle work efficiency. Oxygen extraction has been indicated to be the adapting component with this increased work efficiency in arms. However, we document that decreased blood flow, achieved by blood velocity reduction, is the adapting mechanism responding to the improved aerobic metabolism in the forearm musculature.
最大力量训练(MST)可提高工作效率。然而,由于手臂在运动过程中受肌肉收缩的影响,血流量大大受限,血管传导率较低,这表明手臂在响应增强的工作效率时,更多地依赖于氧提取的适应,而不是腿部。因此,为了研究代谢和血管反应是否具有手臂特异性,我们使用多普勒超声和放置在锁骨下静脉的导管,在 7 名年轻男性(24±3(SD)岁)中测量了稳态工作期间的血流和动静脉氧差[24±3(SD)岁] )在进行了 6 周的握力 MST 后。正如预期的那样,MST 提高了最大力量(49±9 至 62±10 kg)和力量发展速度(923±224 至 1,086±238 N/s),导致亚最大摄氧量(30±9 至 24±10 ml/min)降低,同时工作效率提高(9.3±2.5 至 12.4±3.9%)(均 P <0.05)。反过来,工作效率的提高与血流量减少有关(486±102 至 395±114 ml/min),这是通过血流速度降低(43±8 至 32±6 cm/s)介导的(均 P <0.05)。导动脉直径和动静脉氧差保持不变。最大工作测试显示,力竭时间(949±239 至 1,102±292 s)和最大工作率(均 P <0.05)增加,但峰值摄氧量没有变化。总之,尽管之前有关于代谢和血管肢体特异性差异的指示,但这些结果表明,上肢小肌肉质量力量训练后工作效率的提高伴随着血流量的减少,与下肢的记录一致。新的和值得注意的是,最大力量训练增加了骨骼肌的工作效率。已经表明,在手臂中,氧提取是适应这种增加的工作效率的组成部分。然而,我们记录到,通过降低血流速度来减少血流量是适应前臂肌肉有氧代谢增强的机制。