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Energy sources in skeletal muscle
Pathway
1. Direct phosphorylation
2. Glycolisis
3. Oxidative phosphorylation
Rate
Extent
ATP/glucose
Extremely fast
Very limited
-
Very fast
limited
2-3
Slow
Unlimited
36
Muscle types
• based on the speed of contraction
– fast
– slow
• based on the source of energy
– oxidative
– glycolitic
Basic classification of skeletal muscle
fiber types
Type I: slow
oxidative
Type IIB: fast
glycolytic
Type IIA: fast
oxidative
Slow
Fast
Fast
SR Ca++ pumping capacity
Moderate
High
High
Diameter (diffusion
distance)
Moderate
Large
Small
High
Low
Very high
Moderate
High
High
Fast
Fast
Slow
Myosin isoenzyme
(ATPase rate)
Oxidative capacity
(mitochondrial content,
capillary density,
myoglobin)
Glycolytic capacity
Mechanical response
Components of muscle energetics
• Phosphagen system
8 to10 second
• Glycogen-lactic acid system 1 to 2 minutes
• Aerobic system
Unlimited time (as long as nutrients last)
Components of muscle energetics
• Phosphagen system
8 to 10 seconds
• Glycogen-lactic acid system 1 to 2 minutes
• Aerobic system
Unlimited time (as long as nutrients last)
Components of muscle energetics
• Phosphagen system
8 to 10 seconds
• Glycogen-lactic acid system 1 to 2 minutes
• Aerobic system
Unlimited time (as long as nutrients last)
Muscle performance
• the speed of contraction depends on the load
– v = (A – B * F) / (F + C); where v0 = A / C; F0 = A / B
– isotonic contraction
– isometric contraction
• the performance (P = F * v) of a muscle depends on the load
– bell shaped curve → optimal load [~F0 / 3]
– efficiency ~ 20%
Effects of physical exercise
demand: increased rate of metabolism
Phosphocreatine pool
anaerobic catabolism
aerobic catabolism
ATP
(constant)
Muscle contraction (20%)
Heat production (80%)
glucose, glycogen, FFA
Increased O2 consumption
•
•
•
Respiratory rate ↑
Tidal volume ↑
O2 diffusion in the alveoli ↑
•
•
The maximum stroke volume ↑
The maximum AV O2 difference ↑
Responses of the cardiovascular
system to the physical exercise
• local responses: blood perfusion in the working muscles ↑
– vasodilation due to the sympathetic cholinergic activity
– vasodilation due to the increased metabolism (hypoxia,
hypercapnia, acidosis)
– increased AV O2 difference (O2 extraction)
• changes in the systemic circulation
–
–
–
–
–
–
heart rate ↑
cardiac output ↑
pa ↑
stroke volume ↑
peripheral resistance ↓
redistribution of the circulating blood volume
flow in the pulmonary vessels ↑
? regulation: hyperkapnia, hypoxia, acidosis… → reflexes
Circulatory changes during muscular exercise
Brain
vagus ↓
skeletal muscle
activity ↑
sympathetic
nerves ↑
arterial
arteriolar
pressure ↑
constriction ↑
• renal BF ↓
• splanchnic. BF ↓
• skin BF ↓↑
• resting muscle
BF ↓
heart rate ↑
stroke
volume ↑
cardiac output ↑
Venous
return ↑
vasodilator
metabolites ↑
exercising muscle BF ↑
• „muscle pump”
• „respiratory pump”
BF = blood flow
Changes associated with exercise
cardiovascular parameters
Changes associated with exercise
cardiovascular parameters
• Increase in cardiac output
– Heart rate ↑
– Stroke volume ↑ (in the beginning this is more pronounced)
Changes associated with exercise
cardiovascular parameters
• end diastolic volume ↑
• end systolic volume ↓
• diastolic pressure ↓
• systolic pressure ↑
• mean arterial pressure ↑
Changes associated with exercise
distribution of blood among the organs
• during increased exercise
– muscle BF ↑
– splanchnic BF ↓
– brain and heart BF =
– skin BF ↑ ↓
Changes associated with exercise
adaptation of the respiratory system
• increased respiratory frequency (15/min – 40-50/min)
• increased respiratory volume (0,5 l – 3 l)
• increased respiratory minute volume (7-8 l/min – 150 l/min)
regulation: reflexes activated by hypercapnia, hypoxia?
Changes associated with exercise
adaptation of the respiratory system
• during an intermediate
intensity exercise
– the mean arterial pO2 does
not change significantly
– the mean arterial pCO2
does not change
significantly
– the venous O2
concentration decreases
→
• the reflex regulation is
– breathing-synchronous
changes in pO2 and pCO2
– stimuli coming from
receptors found in the joints
of the limbs
Changes associated with exercise
adaptation of the respiratory system
• performance and oxygen uptake are linearly related
• a maximal oxygen uptake is determined by the level of training
Changes associated with exercise
the „oxygen debt”
• Increased O2 consumption following an exercise is used for
– replenishing the O2 stores (myoglobin)
– replenishing the phosphocreatine pool
– elimination of lactic acid
Changes associated with exercise
training and the physical performance