Longhurst J C, Stebbins C L
Department of Internal Medicine, University of California, Davis, USA.
Cardiol Clin. 1997 Aug;15(3):413-29. doi: 10.1016/s0733-8651(05)70349-0.
A number of normal daily and athletic activities require isometric or static exercise. Sports such as weight lifting and other high-resistance activities are used by power athletes to gain strength and skeletal muscle bulk. Static exercise, the predominant activity used in power training, significantly increases blood pressure, heart rate, myocardial contractility, and cardiac output. These changes occur in response to central neural irradiation, called central command, as well as a reflex originating from statically contracting muscle. Studies have demonstrated that blood pressure appears to be the regulated variable, presumably because the increased pressure provides blood flow into muscles whose arterial inflow is reduced as a result of increases in intramuscular pressure created by contraction. Thus, static exercise is characterized by a pressure load on the heart and can be differentiated from the hemodynamic response to dynamic (isotonic) exercise, which involves a volume load to the heart. Physical training with static exercise (i.e., power training) leads to concentric cardiac (particularly left ventricular) hypertrophy, whereas training with dynamic exercise leads to eccentric hypertrophy. The magnitude of cardiac hypertrophy is much less in athletes training with static than dynamic exercise. Neither systolic nor diastolic function is altered by the hypertrophic process associated with static exercise training. Many of the energy requirements for static exercise, particularly during more severe levels of exercise, are met by anaerobic glycolysis because the contracting muscle becomes comes deprived of blood flow. Power athletes, training with repetitive static exercise, derive little benefit from an increase in oxygen transport capacity, so that maximal oxygen consumption is increased only minimally or not at all. Peripheral cardiovascular adaptations also can occur in response to training with static exercise. Although the studies are controversial, these adaptations include modest decreases in resting blood pressure, reduced increases in blood pressure and sympathetic nerve activity during a given workload, enhanced baroreflex function, increases in muscle capillary-to-fiber ratio, possible improvements in lipid and lipoprotein profiles, and increases in glucose and insulin responsiveness. Some of these adaptations can occur in cardiac or hypertensive patients with no concomitant cardiovascular complications. In both healthy individuals and those with cardiovascular disease, the manner in which resistance training is performed may dictate the extent to which these adjustments take place. Specifically, training that involves frequent repetitions of moderate weight (and hence contains dynamic components) seems to produce the most beneficial results.
许多日常活动和体育活动都需要等长或静态运动。力量型运动员会进行举重等运动以及其他高阻力活动来增强力量和增加骨骼肌量。静态运动是力量训练中的主要活动,会显著提高血压、心率、心肌收缩力和心输出量。这些变化是对中枢神经辐射(称为中枢指令)以及源自静态收缩肌肉的反射的反应。研究表明,血压似乎是被调节的变量,可能是因为压力升高会使血液流入肌肉,而由于收缩导致肌肉内压力增加,这些肌肉的动脉血流量会减少。因此,静态运动的特点是心脏承受压力负荷,这与动态(等张)运动对血流动力学的反应不同,动态运动涉及心脏的容量负荷。进行静态运动的体育训练(即力量训练)会导致向心性心脏(特别是左心室)肥大,而进行动态运动的训练会导致离心性肥大。进行静态运动训练的运动员心脏肥大的程度远小于进行动态运动训练的运动员。与静态运动训练相关的肥大过程不会改变收缩功能或舒张功能。静态运动的许多能量需求,特别是在运动强度较大时,通过无氧糖酵解来满足,因为收缩的肌肉会出现血流不足。力量型运动员通过重复进行静态运动训练,从氧气输送能力的增加中获益甚微,因此最大耗氧量仅略有增加或根本没有增加。外周心血管适应也可能因进行静态运动训练而发生。尽管这些研究存在争议,但这些适应包括静息血压适度降低、在给定工作量期间血压和交感神经活动的升高幅度减小、压力反射功能增强、肌肉毛细血管与纤维比例增加、脂质和脂蛋白谱可能改善以及葡萄糖和胰岛素反应性增加。其中一些适应可能发生在没有伴随心血管并发症的心脏病患者或高血压患者身上。在健康个体和患有心血管疾病的个体中,进行阻力训练的方式可能决定这些调整发生的程度。具体而言,涉及频繁重复中等重量(因此包含动态成分)的训练似乎能产生最有益的效果。