Brooks G A, Wolfel E E, Butterfield G E, Cymerman A, Roberts A C, Mazzeo R S, Reeves J T
Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, USA.
Am J Physiol. 1998 Oct;275(4):R1192-201. doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.1998.275.4.R1192.
We evaluated the hypotheses that on acute exposure to hypobaric hypoxia, sympathetic stimulation leads to augmented muscle lactate production and circulating [lactate] through a beta-adrenergic mechanism and that beta-adrenergic adaptation to chronic hypoxia is responsible for the blunted exercise lactate response after acclimatization to altitude. Five control and 6 beta-blocked men were studied during rest and exercise at sea level (SL), on acute exposure to 4,300 m (A1), and after a 3-wk sojourn at altitude (A2). Exercise was by leg cycling at 49% of SL peak O2 consumption (VO2 peak) (65% of altitude VO2 peak or 87 +/- 2.6 W); beta-blockade was by propranolol (80 mg 3x daily), femoral arterial and venous blood was sampled; leg blood flow (Q) was measured by thermodilution, leg lactate net release [ = (2) (1-leg Q) venous-arterial concentrationL] was calculated, and vastus lateralis needle biopsies were obtained. Muscle [lactate] increased with exercise and acute altitude exposure but regressed to SL values with acclimatization; beta-blockade had no effect on muscle [lactate]. Arterial [lactate] rose during exercise at SL (0.9 +/- 0.1 to 1.5 +/- 0.3 mM); exercise at A1 produced the greatest arterial [lactate] (4.4 +/- 0.8 mM), and exercise at A2 an intermediate response (2.1 +/- 0.6 mM). beta-Blockade reduced circulating [lactate] approximately 45% during exercise under all altitude conditions. increased transiently at exercise onset but then declined over time under all conditions. Blood and muscle "lactate paradoxes" occurred independent of beta-adrenergic influences, and the hypotheses relating the blood lactate response at altitude to beta-adrenergic mechanisms are rejected. During exercise at altitude, arterial [lactate] is determined by factors in addition to hypoxemia, circulating epinephrine, and net lactate release from active muscle beds.
急性暴露于低压低氧环境时,交感神经刺激通过β-肾上腺素能机制导致肌肉乳酸生成增加和循环[乳酸]升高;并且对慢性低氧的β-肾上腺素能适应是高原适应后运动乳酸反应减弱的原因。对5名对照者和6名使用β受体阻滞剂的男性在海平面(SL)休息和运动时、急性暴露于4300米(A1)时以及在高原停留3周后(A2)进行了研究。运动方式为腿部蹬车,强度为海平面峰值耗氧量(VO2峰值)的49%(高原VO2峰值的65%或87±2.6瓦);使用普萘洛尔(每日3次,每次80毫克)进行β受体阻滞,采集股动脉和静脉血样;通过热稀释法测量腿部血流量(Q),计算腿部乳酸净释放量[ =(2)(单侧腿部Q)(静脉-动脉乳酸浓度)],并获取股外侧肌针吸活检样本。肌肉[乳酸]随运动和急性高原暴露而增加,但在适应后恢复到海平面值;β受体阻滞对肌肉[乳酸]无影响。海平面运动时动脉[乳酸]升高(从0.9±0.1毫摩尔升至1.5±0.3毫摩尔);A1运动时动脉[乳酸]最高(4.4±0.8毫摩尔),A2运动时为中等反应(2.1±0.6毫摩尔)。在所有海拔条件下运动时,β受体阻滞使循环[乳酸]降低约45%。运动开始时短暂升高,但在所有条件下随后随时间下降。血液和肌肉“乳酸悖论”的发生与β-肾上腺素能影响无关,与高原时血液乳酸反应与β-肾上腺素能机制相关的假设被否定。在高原运动期间,动脉[乳酸]由除低氧血症、循环肾上腺素和活跃肌肉床乳酸净释放之外的因素决定。