4.4 Article

Influence of passive lower-body heating on muscle metabolic perturbation and high-intensity exercise tolerance in humans

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EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
卷 112, 期 10, 页码 3569-3576

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00421-012-2336-6

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Fatigue; Muscle metabolism; P-31-MRS; Hyperthermia

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The purpose of this investigation was to determine the influence of heat stress on the dynamics of muscle metabolic perturbation during high-intensity exercise. Seven healthy males completed single-legged knee-extensor exercise until the limit of tolerance on two separate occasions. In a randomized order the subjects underwent 40 min of lower-body immersion in warm water at 42A degrees C prior to exercise (HOT) or received no prior thermal manipulation (CON). Following the intervention, muscle metabolism was measured at rest and throughout exercise using P-31-MRS. The tolerable duration of high-intensity exercise was reduced by 36% after passive heating (CON: 474 +/- A 146 vs. HOT: 303 +/- A 76 s; P = 0.005). Intramuscular pH was lower over the first 60 s of exercise (CON: 7.05 +/- A 0.02 vs. HOT: 7.00 +/- A 0.03; P = 0.019) in HOT compared to CON. The rate of muscle [PCr] degradation during exercise was greater in the HOT condition (CON: -0.17 +/- A 0.08 vs. HOT: -0.25 +/- A 0.10% s(-1); P = 0.006) and pH also tended to change more rapidly in HOT (P = 0.09). Muscle [PCr] (CON: 26 +/- A 14 vs. HOT: 29 +/- A 10%), [Pi] (CON: 504 +/- A 236 vs. HOT: 486 +/- A 186%) and pH (CON: 6.84 +/- A 0.13 vs. HOT: 6.80 +/- A 0.14; P > 0.05) were not statistically different at the limit of tolerance (P > 0.05 for all comparisons). These results suggest that the reduced time-to-exhaustion during high-intensity knee-extensor exercise following lower-body heating might be related, in part, to accelerated rates of change of intramuscular [PCr] and pH towards 'critical' values that limit muscle function.

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