Neural and humoral signals for pulmonary ventilation arising in exercising muscle.

Medicine and science in sports Pub Date : 1979-01-01
M Mahler
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Abstract

This review analyzes attempts to isolate and quantify the neurally and humorally mediated portions of the ventilatory response to moderate exercise. 1. Dejours' "neuro-humoral theory" postulates that, following a change from rest to moderate, constant-load exercise in man, the abrupt initial increase in VE is neurally mediated, and the subsequent gradual rise in VE is humorally mediated. However, no compelling evidence exists to support either of these hypotheses. Moreover, there is a plausible alternative method of partitioning VE into fast and slow components: the steady-state value of VE may be entirely due to the slow component. 2. The similarity between the kinetics of VE and VCO2 during exercise suggests that the ventilatory response may be primarily triggered by a signal that has its origin in the CO2 flux to the lung. Intravenous CO2 loading in resting animals produces such a flux, unaccompanied by possible neural signals arising from contracting muscles. However, experiments of this type have produced drastically conflicting results. 3. With cross-circulation techniques, the ventilatory response to neural signals from exercising limbs can be isolated, by sending the blood leaving these limbs directly into the venous system of another animal. Experiments of this type with anesthetized dogs led Kao and co-workers to conclude that the increase in VE during steady-state exercise is entirely due to neural signals originating in the exercising limbs. 4. In skeletal muscle, the kinetics of VO2 closely follow those of the concentrations of creatine phosphate and free creatine: a sensor of either of these concentrations could thus theoretically serve as a useful "metaboreceptor". The extracellular concentration of K+ in contracting muscles also changes rapidly enough to lead cardio-ventilatory adjustments, and thus might possibly trigger a neural signal involved in their control.

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运动肌肉产生的肺通气的神经和体液信号。
这篇综述分析了对适度运动的通气反应的神经和体液介导部分的分离和量化的尝试。1. Dejours的“神经-体液理论”假设,在人类从休息到适度、恒定负荷运动的变化之后,VE的突然初始增加是神经介导的,随后VE的逐渐上升是体液介导的。然而,没有令人信服的证据支持这两种假设。此外,还有一种似是而非的方法将VE划分为快速和慢速组件:VE的稳态值可能完全由慢速组件决定。2. 运动过程中VE和VCO2动力学的相似性表明,通气反应可能主要是由一个信号触发的,该信号起源于肺部的CO2通量。静息动物的静脉二氧化碳负荷产生这样的通量,而不伴有肌肉收缩产生的可能的神经信号。然而,这种类型的实验产生了截然相反的结果。3.通过交叉循环技术,通过将血液从四肢直接送入另一只动物的静脉系统,可以分离出运动肢体对神经信号的通气反应。对麻醉的狗进行的这类实验使Kao和他的同事得出结论,在稳态运动期间VE的增加完全是由于源自运动肢体的神经信号。4. 在骨骼肌中,VO2的动力学与磷酸肌酸和游离肌酸的浓度密切相关:因此,这两种浓度的传感器理论上都可以作为有用的“代谢受体”。收缩肌肉的细胞外K+浓度变化也足够快,足以导致心肺调节,因此可能触发参与其控制的神经信号。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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