Lactate and epinephrine during exercise in altitude natives.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_3A8AE89FF2EF
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Lactate and epinephrine during exercise in altitude natives.
Journal
Journal of Applied Physiology
ISSN
8750-7587 (Print)
ISSN-L
0161-7567
Publication state
Published
Issued date
1996
Volume
81
Number
6
Pages
2488-2494
Language
english
Abstract
We tested the hypothesis that the reported low blood lactate accumulation ([La]) during exercise in altitude-native humans is refractory to hypoxianormoxia transitions by investigating whether acute changes in inspired O2 fraction (FIo2) affect the [La] vs. power output (W) relationship or, alternatively, as reported for lowlanders, whether changes in [La] vs. W on changes in FIo2 are related to changes in blood epinephrine concentration ([Epi]). Altitude natives [n = 8, age 24 +/- 1 (SE) yr, body mass 62 +/- 3 kg, height 167 +/- 2 cm] in La Paz, Bolivia (3,600 m) performed incremental exercise with two legs and one leg in chronic hypoxia and acute normoxia (AN). Submaximal one- and two-leg O2 uptake (Vo2) vs. W relationships were not altered by FIo2. AN increased two-leg peak Vo2 by 10% and peak W by 7%. AN paradoxically decreased one-leg peak Vo2 by 7%, whereas peak W remained the same. The [La] vs. W relationships were similar to those reported in unacclimatized lowlanders. There was a shift to the right on AN, and maximum [La] was reduced by 7 and 8% for one- and two-leg exercises, respectively. [Epi] and [La] were tightly related (mean r = 0.81) independently of FIo2. Thus normoxia attenuated the increment in both [La] and [Epi] as a function of W, whereas the correlation between [La] and [Epi] was unaffected. These data suggest loose linkage of glycolysis to oxidative phosphorylation under influence from [Epi]. In conclusion, high-altitude natives appear to be not fundamentally different from lowlanders with regard to the effect of acute changes in FIo2 on [La] during exercise.
Keywords
Adult, Altitude, Epinephrine/metabolism, Exercise/physiology, Humans, Lactates/metabolism, Male
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
19/09/2013 10:00
Last modification date
20/08/2019 13:30