پديد آورندگان :
Kapus Jernej نويسنده , U?aj Anton نويسنده , ?trumbelj Boro نويسنده , Kapus Venceslav نويسنده
چكيده لاتين :
Extrapolation from post-exercise measurements has been used to
estimate respiratory and blood gas parameters during exercise.
This may not be accurate in exercise with reduced breathing
frequency (RBF), since spontaneous breathing usually follows
exercise. This study was performed to ascertain whether measurement
of oxygen saturation and blood gases immediately after
exercise accurately reflected their values during exercise with
RBF. Eight healthy male subjects performed an incremental
cycling test with RBF at 10 breaths per minute. A constant load
test with RBF (B10) was then performed to exhaustion at the
peak power output obtained during the incremental test. Finally,
the subjects repeated the constant load test with spontaneous
breathing (SB) using the same protocol as B10. Pulmonary
ventilation (VE), end-tidal oxygen (PETO2), and carbon dioxide
pressures (PETCO2) and oxygen saturation (SaO2) were measured
during both constant load tests. The partial pressures of
oxygen (PO2) and carbon dioxide (PCO2) in capillary blood
were measured during the last minute of exercise, immediately
following exercise and during the third minute of recovery. At
the end of exercise RBF resulted in lower PETO2, SaO2 and PO2,
and higher PETCO2 and PCO2 when compared to spontaneous
breathing during exercise. Lower SaO2 and PETO2 were detected
only for the first 16s and 20s of recovery after B10 compared to
the corresponding period in SB. There were no significant differences
in PO2 between SB and B10 measured immediately
after the exercise. During recovery from exercise, PETCO2 remained
elevated for the first 120s in the B10 trial. There were
also significant differences between SB and B10 in PCO2 immediately
after exercise. We conclude that RBF during high
intensity exercise results in hypoxia; however, due to postexercise
hyperpnoea, measurements of blood gas parameters
taken 15s after cessation of exercise did not reflect the changes
in PO2 and SaO2 seen during exercise.