Cardiorespiratory Responses To Acute Exercise
Cardiorespiratory Responses To Acute Exercise
to Acute Exercise
Overview
• Normal ranges
– Untrained RHR: 60 to 80 beats/min
– Trained RHR: as low as 30 to 40 beats/min
– Affected by neural tone, temperature, altitude
– HR decreases – parasympathetic
Figure 8.1
Estimating Maximal Exercise Capacity
Figure 8.2
Cardiovascular Responses:
Stroke Volume (SV) how much blood
is pumped with each beat
•
• With intensity up to 40 to 60% V O2max
– Beyond this, SV plateaus to exhaustion
– Possible exception: elite endurance athletes
Figure 8.3
CO and SV during Exercise
Figure 8.4
Changes in EDV, ESV and SV during
Exercise
Figure 8.5
Cardiovascular Responses:
Factors That Increase Stroke Volume
• Preload (EDV): end-diastolic ventricular stretch
– Stretch (i.e., EDV) contraction strength
– **Frank-Starling mechanism**
Figure 8.6
Trained vs Untrained
Cardiovascular Responses:
Fick Principle
• Calculation of tissue O2 consumption depends on
blood flow, O2 extraction
Figure 8.7a
Stroke Volume Changes
Figure 8.7b
Cardiac Output Changes
Figure 8.7c
Cardiovascular Responses:
Blood Pressure – pressure exerted on
arteries as heart contracts
• During endurance exercise, mean arterial pressure
(MAP) increases
– Systolic BP proportional to exercise intensity
– Diastolic BP slight(bc VD) or slight (at max exercise)
•
• MAP = Q x total peripheral resistance (TPR)
– Q• , TPR slightly
– Muscle vasodilation versus sympatholysis (local VD due to
metabolic products)
Cardiovascular Responses:
Blood Pressure
Figure 8.8
Cardiovascular Responses:
***Cardiovascular Drift***
• Associated with core temperature and
dehydration
• SV drifts HR has to compensate
– Skin blood flow
– Plasma volume (sweating)
– Venous return/preload
Figure 8.9
Cardiovascular Responses:
Competition for Blood Supply
-
• (a-v )O2 difference (mL O2 / 100 mL blood)
– Arterial O2 content – mixed venous O2 content
– Resting: ~6 mL O2 / 100 mL blood
– Max exercise: ~16 to 17 mL O2/100 mL blood
Figure 8.10
Cardiovascular Responses:
Plasma Volume
Figure 8.11
Cardiovascular Responses:
Hemoconcentration (V of RBC)
• Plasma volume hemoconcentration
– Fluid percent of blood , cell percent of blood
– Hematocrit increases up to 50% or beyond
• Net effects
– Red blood cell concentration
– Hemoglobin concentration
– O2-carrying capacity
Central Regulation
of Cardiovascular Responses
• Central command
– Higher brain centers
– Coactivates motor and cardiovascular centers
**CV system’s Response to Exercise**
Figure 8.12
CV Control During Exercise
Figure 8.13
Cardiovascular Responses:
Integration of the Exercise Response
Figure 8.14
Respiratory Responses:
Breathing Irregularities
• Dyspnea (shortness of breath)
– Common with poor aerobic fitness
– Caused by inability to adjust to high blood PCO2, H+
– Also, fatigue in respiratory muscles despite drive to
ventilation
• Ventilatory threshold
– Point where L air breathed > L O2 consumed
– Associated with lactate threshold and PCO2
Changes in Pulmonary Ventilation
Figure 8.15
Respiratory Responses:
Estimating Lactate Threshold
Figure 8.16
Respiratory Responses:
Limitations to Performance
Figure 8.17
Respiratory Responses:
Acid–Base Balance
Figure 8.18