Download Ventilatory and Cardiovascular Dynamics

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Coronary artery disease wikipedia , lookup

Management of acute coronary syndrome wikipedia , lookup

Jatene procedure wikipedia , lookup

Myocardial infarction wikipedia , lookup

Quantium Medical Cardiac Output wikipedia , lookup

Dextro-Transposition of the great arteries wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Ventilatory and
Cardiovascular Dynamics
• Brooks Ch 13 and 16
• OUTLINE
• Ventilation as limiting factor in
aerobic performance
• Cardiovascular responses to exercise
• Limits of CV performance
– anaerobic hypothesis
– protection of heart and muscle
• Vo2 max criteria
• CV function and training
1
Ventilation as a limiting
Factor to performance
• Ventilation not thought to limit
aerobic performance at sea level
– capacity to inc ventilation with ex
– relatively greater than that to inc CO
• Ventilation perfusion Ratio - VE/CO
– Fig 12-14
– linear increase in ventilation with
intensity-to vent threshold - non linear
– Fig 13-1 rest 5 L/min - 190 L/min
– ~1 at rest - inc 5-6 fold to max exercise
• Ventilatory Equivalent VE/VO2
– rest 20 ; max 35
2
VE max vs. MVV
• MVV - max voluntary ventilatory
capacity
• max VE often less than MVV
• PAO2(alveolar) and PaO2(arterial)
– Fig 11-3 , 12-11
– maintain PAO2 - or rises
– PaO2 also well maintained
• Alveolar surface area - massive
• Fatigue of Vent musculature
–
–
–
–
–
MVV tests - reduce rate at end of test
repeat trials - decreased performance
fatigue yes - is it relevant -NO
VE does not reach MVV
athletes post ex can raise VE to MVV
3
Elite Athletes
• Fig 13-2 - observe decline in PaO2
with maximal exercise in some elite
• may see vent response blunted, even
with dec in PaO2
– may be due to economy
– extremely high pulmonary flow, inc
cost of breathing, any extra O2 used to
maintain this cost
– ? Rise in PAO2 - was pulmonary vent a
limitation, or is it diffusion due to very
high CO ?
• Altitude
– experienced climbers - breathe more maintain Pa O2 when climbing
– Elite - may be more susceptible
4
CV Responses to Exercise
• Increase flow to active areas
• decrease flow to less critical areas
• Principle responses
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Inc CO - HR, SV
Inc Skin blood flow
dec flow to kidneys, viscera
vasoconstriction in spleen
maintain brain blood flow
inc coronary blood flow
inc muscle blood flow
• Table 16-1
• CV response - depends on type and
intensity of activity
– dynamic - inc systolic BP; not Diastolic
– strength - in syst and diastolic
5
Oxygen Consumption
•
•
•
•
•
•
Determinants - rate of O2 transport
O2 carrying capacity of blood
amount of O2 extracted
VO2 = Q * (a-v)O2
Exercise of increasing intensity
Fig 16-1,2,3
– CO and (a-v)o2 increases equally
important at low intensities
– high intensity HR more important
– (a-v)O2 - depends on capacity of mito
to use O2 - rate of diffusion-blood flow
• O2 carrying capacity - Hb content
6
Heart Rate
• Most important factor
• inc with intensity, levels off at
VO2max range 70 - 200 bpm
– increase due to withdrawal of Psymp
and symp stimulation
• estimated Max HR 220-age (+/- 12)
– influenced by anxiety, dehydration,
temp, altitude, digestion
• Less HR response with strength exer
– increases with muscle mass used
– higher with upper body - at same power
– inc MAP, peripheral resistance,
intrathoracic pressure
– less effective muscle pump - venous
return
7
HR and Stroke volume
• Rate Pressure Produce - RPP
– HR X Systolic BP
• estimate of cardiac load - O2
• Stroke Volume
• Fig 16-2 - increase with intensity to
25-50% max - levels off
– inc EDV (end diastolic volume)
– high HR may dec ventricular filling
– athletes high Co due to high SV
• supine exercise – SV does not increase - starts high
• SV has major impact on CO
– same max HR - double the SV and CO
8
(a-v)O2 difference
• Difference increases with intensity
– fig 16-3 - rest 5.6 - max 16
– always some oxygenated blood
returning to heart - non active tissue
– (a-v)O2 can approach 100% in
maximally working muscle
• Blood Pressure fig 16-4
–
–
–
–
–
= CO * peripheral resistance (TPR)
dec TPR with exercise to 1/3 resting
CO rises 5-20 L/min
systolic BP goes up steadily
MAP - mean arterial pressure
• 1/3 (systolic-diastolic) + diastolic
– diastolic relatively constant
• rise - associated with CAD
9
Cardiovascular Triage
• With exercise - blood redistributed
from inactive to active tissue
– brain and heart spared vasoconstriction
– symp stim inc with intensity
• maintenance of BP priority
– working ms can be constricted
– protective mechanism - maintain flow
to heart and CNS
– limits exercise intensity - max Co can
be achieved with out resorting to
anaerobic metabolism
• Eg - easier breathing - inc flow to ms
– harder breathing - dec flow to ms
• Eg. Altitude study fig 16-5
10
Coronary blood flow
• Large capacity for increase
– (260-900ml/min)
– due to metabolic regulation
– flow occurs mainly during diastole
• warm up - facilitates inc in coronary
circulation
• Limits of CV performance
• VO2 max - long considered best measure
of capacity of CV system and aerobic
performance (fig 16-6)
• VO2 max anaerobic hypothesis
• = Q max * (a-v)O2 max
– VO2 max indicated by point at which
O2 consumption fails to rise despite an
increased power output or intensity
11
CV Performance Limitation
• VO2max - long thought to be best
measure of CV and endurance capacity
– VO2 max - maximum capacity for aerobic
ATP synthesis
– Endurance performance - ability to
perform in endurance events
• Anaerobic hypothesis
• After max point - anaerobic metabolism
to continue exercise- plateau
– max CO and anaerobic metabolism will
limit VO2 max
– and determine fitness and performance
• Tim Noakes - South Africa
• re-analyzed data from classic studies
– most subjects did not plateau
12
Inconsistencies with
Anaerobic hypothesis
• CO dependant upon and determined
by coronary blood flow
– Max CO implies cardiac fatigue coronary ischemia -? Angina pectoris?
• Blood transfusion and O2 breathing
– inc performance - still no plateau
– was it a CO limitation?
• Blood doping studies
– VO2 max improved for longer time
period than performance measures
• altitude - observe decrease in CO
– indicative of protective mechanism
13
Protection of Heart and
Muscle
• Noakes (1998)
• CV regulation and muscle
recruitment are regulated by neural
and chemical control mechanisms
– prevent damage to heart, CNS and
muscle
– by regulating force and power output
and controlling tissue blood flow
• suggest peak treadmill velocity as
predictor of aerobic performance
– high cross bridge cycling and
respiratory adaptations
– Biochemical factors - mito volume, ox
enzyme capacity
14
Practical Aspects
• Primary reg mech of Cardio Resp
and neuromuscular systems facilitate
intense exercise
– until it perceives risk of ischemic injury
– prevents muscle from over working
• Programs and Techniques for fitness
–
–
–
–
muscle power output capacity
substrate utilization
thermoregulatory capacity
reduce work of breathing
• above reduce load on heart - allows
more intense exercise before protection
instigated
15
VO2 max and Performance
• General population - VO2 max will
predict performance in endurance
• elite athletes - not as accurate
– world records for marathon
– male 69 female 73 ml/kg/min
– male 15 min faster
• other factors in addition to VO2 max
–
–
–
–
–
speed
ability to continue at high % of capacity
lactate clearance capacity
performance economy
in general high VO2 max pre req for
elite performance - 65-70 ml/kg/min
– represents capacity to exercise at high
intensity before system limits itself
16
Changes in CV with
Training
• Tables 16-1,2
• Heart - inc ability to pump bloodSV - inc end diastolic volume-EDV
• Endurance training
– small inc in ventricular mass
– triggered by volume load
• resistance training
– pressure load - larger inc in mass
• adaptation is specific to form
– swimming improves swimming
• Interval training - repeated bouts of
short to medium duration
– improve speed and CV functioning
– combine with overdistance training
17
CV Adaptations
• O2 consumption
• improvements depend on
– prior fitness, type of training, age
– can inc VO2 max ~20%
– Performance can improve > than 20%
• Heart Rate
– training - dec resting and submax HR
– inc Psymp tone to SA node
• Max HR - dec ~3 bpm with training
– progressive overload for continued
adaptation
• Stroke volume - 20% inc - rest, sub and
max with training
– slower heart rate - inc filling time
– inc volume - inc contractility - SV
18
CV Adaptations
• Stroke volume - cont.
– EDV also inc with training - inc left
vent vol and compliance, blood vol,
– Myocardial contractility increased
– release and tx of calcium from SR
– isoform of myosin ATPase
– inc ejection fraction
• (a-v)O2 difference
–
–
–
–
–
inc slightly with training
right shift of Hb saturation curve
mitochondrial adaptation
Hb and Mb [ ]
muscle capillary density
19
CV Adaptations
• Blood pressure - dec resting and
submax
• Blood flow
– training - dec coronary blood flow rest
and submax (slight)
– inc SV and dec HR - dec O2 demand
– inc coronary flow at max
– no inc in myocardial vascularity
• inc in muscle vascularity –
–
–
–
dec peripheral resistance - inc CO
dec musc blood flow at sub max
inc extraction - more blood for skin...
Max - 10 % inc in musc flow
• no change in skin blood flow
20