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Pulmonary Ventilation during Exercise

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During light & moderate steady rate exercise, VE:VO2 linear relationship. ... Recall that metabolic CO2 is produced in Krebs Cycle in oxidation of acetyl CoA. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pulmonary Ventilation during Exercise


1
  • Pulmonary Ventilation during Exercise

2
Ventilation in Steady Rate Exercise
  • During light moderate steady rate exercise,
    VEVO2 linear relationship.
  • Ventilatory equivalent for oxygen (VEVO2) ratio
    of minute ventilation to oxygen uptake.
  • Usually 25 1 during submaximal exercise up to
    55 max.

3
Ventilation in Steady Rate Exercise
  • Ventilatory response to fixed level of submaximal
    exercise can be divided into 4 phases.
  • Sudden increase at onset.
  • Ventilation gradually increases to higher
    steady-rate level.
  • Steady state level of ventilation maintained.
  • Recovery period gradual return to resting levels.
  • Phase IV higher than resting levels coincide with
    EPOC.

4
Ventilation in Steady Rate Exercise
  • Ventilatory equivalent for carbon dioxide
    (VEVO2) ratio of minute ventilation to carbon
    dioxide produced.
  • Remains constant during steady rate exercise
    because pulmonary ventilation eliminates CO2 .

5
Ventilation in Non-Steady-Rate Exercise
  • Minute ventilation (VE) increases in proportion
    to oxygen consumption over range from rest to
    moderate exercise.
  • VE increases dispropor-tionately to oxygen
    consumption over range from moderate to strenuous.

6
Ventilation in Non-Steady-Rate Exercise
  • The point at which ventilation increases
    disproportionately with oxygen uptake during
    incremental exercise is termed ventilatory
    threshold (VT).

7
Ventilation in Non-Steady-Rate Exercise
  • Lactic acid generated during anaerobic glycolysis
    is buffered in blood by sodium bicarbonate.
  • Lactic acid NaHCO3 ?
  • Na Lactate H2CO3 ? H20 CO2

8
Ventilation in Non-Steady-Rate Exercise
  • The excess, non-metabolic CO2 stimulates
    ventilation.
  • Recall that metabolic CO2 is produced in Krebs
    Cycle in oxidation of acetyl CoA.

9
Ventilation in Non-Steady-Rate Exercise
  • The non-metabolic CO2 from buffering HLa drives
    increased VE to eliminate it, so VE VCO2 remains
    constant.
  • The increased in VE exceeds increase in VO2
    disproportionately.
  • The point at which VEO2 breaks with linearity is
    the ventilatory threshold.

RER 1 where two lines intersect. R values gt 1
indicate CO2 production exceeds O2 consumption,
evidence of non-metabolic CO2 production.
10
Ventilation in Non-Steady-Rate Exercise
  • As exercise intensity increases, blood lactate
    begins to systematically increase over a baseline
    value of 4 mM/L termed onset of blood lactate.
  • Blood lactate accumulation associated with
    changes in CO2 production, blood pH, H,
    bicarbonate, RER.

11
Ventilation in Non-Steady-Rate Exercise
  • Although variables (CO2 production, blood pH,
    H, bicarbonate, RER) are related to OBLA,
    doubtful that VT can be used to denote onset of
    anaerobic metabolism.
  • OBLA directly assessed by measuring lactate level
    in blood.

12
Ventilation in Non-Steady-Rate Exercise
  • Common practice to use bloodless techniques
    e.g. R gt1, or break in ventilatory equivalent for
    oxygen to denote anaerobic threshold.

13
Does Ventilation Limit Aerobic Capacity for
Average Person?
  • If inadequate breathing capacity limited aerobic
    capacity, ventilatory equivalent for oxygen would
    decrease.
  • Actually, healthy person tends to over-breathe in
    relation to VO2.
  • In strenuous exercise, decreases arterial PCO2
    increase Alveolar PO2.

14
Work of Breathing
  • Two major factors determine energy requirements
    of breathing
  • Compliance of lungs
  • Resistance of airways to smooth flow of air
  • As rate depth of breathing increase during
    exercise, energy cost of breathing increases too.
  • At maximal exercise when VE 100 L/m, oxygen cost
    of breathing represents 10-20 of total VO2.

15
Work of Breathing
  • Acute effects of 15 puffs on a cigarette during a
    5-minute period
  • 3 fold increase in airway resistance
  • Lasts an average 35 minutes
  • Smokers exercising at 80
  • Energy requirement of breathing after smoking was
    14 of oxygen uptake
  • Energy requirement of breathing no cigarettes was
    only 9.

16
References
  • Axen and Axen. 2001. Illustrated Principles of
    Exercise Physiology. Prentice Hall.
  • Kapit, Macey, Meisami. 1987. Physiology Coloring
    Book. Harper Row.
  • McArdle, Katch, Katch. 2006. Image Collection
    Essentials of Exercise Physiology, 3rd ed.
    Lippincott William Wilkens.
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