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首页> 外文期刊>Journal of applied physiology >Effect of short-term exercise-heat acclimation on ventilatory and cerebral blood flow responses to passive heating at rest in humans
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Effect of short-term exercise-heat acclimation on ventilatory and cerebral blood flow responses to passive heating at rest in humans

机译:短期运动热适应对人静止时被动加热的通气和脑血流反应的影响

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Hyperthermia induces hyperventilation and cerebral hypoperfusion in resting humans. We tested the hypothesis that short-term exercise-heat acclimation would alleviate those effects. Twenty healthy male subjects were divided into two groups that performed exercise training in the heat (TR-HEAT, n = 10) or cold (TR-COLD, n = 10). Before and after the training, the subjects in both groups participated in passive-heat tests at rest. Training was performed at 37 degrees C (TR-HEAT) or 10 degrees C (TR-COLD) and entailed four 20-min bouts of cycling at 50% peak oxygen uptake separated by 10-min recoveries daily for 6 consecutive days. After TR-HEAT, esophageal temperature was lowered when measured before and during passive heating, as was the esophageal temperature threshold for cutaneous active vasodilation, whereas plasma volume was increased (all P < 0.05). These traditional indices of successful heat acclimation were not all induced by TR-COLD (all P > 0.05). TR-HEAT had no significant effect on passive heating-induced increases in minute ventilation, even when evaluated as the esophageal temperature threshold for increases in minute ventilation and the slope relating minute ventilation to esophageal temperature (all P > 0.05). By contrast, TR-HEAT attenuated the passive heating-induced reduction in the cerebral vascular conductance index (middle cerebral artery mean blood velocity/mean arterial pressure) (all P < 0.05). TR-COLD did not attenuate the increase in minute ventilation or the decrease in the cerebral vascular conductance index observed during passive heating (all P > 0.05). These data suggest that in resting heated humans, short-term heat acclimation achieved through moderate-intensity exercise training (i.e., 50% peak oxygen uptake) in the heat does not influence hyperthermia- induced hyperventilation, but it does potentially attenuate cerebral hypoperfusion.
机译:体温过高会导致静止的人过度换气和脑灌注不足。我们检验了短期运动热适应会减轻这些影响的假设。将20名健康男性受试者分为两组,分别在高温(TR-HEAT,n = 10)或寒冷(TR-COLD,n = 10)下进行运动训练。训练前后,两组受试者均参加了休息时的被动热测试。训练是在37摄氏度(TR-HEAT)或10摄氏度(TR-COLD)下进行的,需要进行四次20分钟的循环运动,以50%的峰值氧吸收量进行,并连续6天每天恢复10分钟。 TR-HEAT后,在被动加热之前和过程中进行测量时,食管温度降低,皮肤主动血管舒张的食管温度阈值也降低,而血浆体积增加(所有P <0.05)。这些传统的成功的热适应指数并不是全部由TR-COLD引起的(所有P> 0.05)。即使将TR-HEAT评估为分钟通气增加的食管温度阈值和将分钟通气与食管温度相关的斜率(所有P> 0.05),TR-HEAT也不会对被动加热引起的分钟通气增加产生明显影响。相比之下,TR-HEAT减弱了被动加热导致的脑血管电导率指数降低(大脑中动脉平均血流速度/平均动脉压)(所有P <0.05)。 TR-COLD并未减弱被动加热期间观察到的分钟通气量的增加或脑血管电导率指数的降低(所有P> 0.05)。这些数据表明在静息的加热的人中,通过中等强度的运动训练(即峰值摄氧量为50%)实现的短期热适应训练不会影响热疗引起的过度换气,但可能会减弱脑灌注不足。

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