盐和液体负荷:对血容量和运动表现的影响。

Medicine and sport science Pub Date : 2012-01-01 Epub Date: 2012-10-15 DOI:10.1159/000341945
Ricardo Mora-Rodriguez, Nassim Hamouti
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引用次数: 18

摘要

在长时间的运动中,出汗导致的液体和盐的损失会减少血浆量,从而导致心率漂移,这与体温过高和表现下降有关。口服补液可减少血浆容量损失,减少心率漂移和高热。此外,补液中钠的含量是汗液的两倍(即约90毫摩尔/升钠),运动时摄入可恢复血浆容量,运动前摄入可扩大血浆容量。近年来,运动前摄入盐和液体以扩大血浆容量的研究越来越受到文献的关注。在四项研究中,运动前摄入盐和液体可以改善运动表现,以消耗时间来衡量,无论是在热中性环境中还是在高温环境中。在炎热的环境中,表现的改善与降低核心温度和心率有关,而在热中性环境中表现改善的原因尚不清楚。然而,当摄入高于0.9%的运动前生理盐水溶液(即> 164 mmol/l Na(+))时,渗透压和血浆钠升高,核心温度保持在脱水水平。因此,过多的盐会抵消等离子体体积膨胀对散热的有益影响,从而影响性能。总之,现有文献表明,运动前摄入浓度不超过164 mmol/l Na(+)的生理盐水有助于随后在温暖或热中性环境下的长时间运动。
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Salt and fluid loading: effects on blood volume and exercise performance.

During prolonged exercise, fluid and salt losses through sweating reduce plasma volume which leads to heart rate drift in association with hyperthermia and reductions in performance. Oral rehydration with water reduces the loss of plasma volume and lessens heart rate drift and hyperthermia. Moreover, the inclusion of sodium in the rehydration solution to levels that double those in sweat (i.e., around 90 mmol/l Na(+)) restores plasma volume when ingested during exercise, and expands plasma volume if ingested pre-exercise. Pre-exercise salt and fluid ingestion with the intention of expanding plasma volume has received an increasing amount of attention in the literature in recent years. In four studies, pre-exercise salt and fluid ingestion improved performance, measured as time to exhaustion, either during exercise in a thermoneutral or in a hot environment. While in a hot environment, the performance improvements were linked to lowering of core temperatures and heart rate, the reasons for the improved performance in a thermoneutral environment remain unclear. However, when ingesting pre-exercise saline solutions above 0.9% (i.e., > 164 mmol/l Na(+)), osmolality and plasma sodium increase and core temperature remain at dehydration levels. Thus, too much salt counteracts the beneficial effects of plasma volume expansion on heat dissipation and hence in performance. In summary, the available literature suggests that pre-exercise saline ingestion with concentrations not over 164 mmol/l Na(+) is an ergogenic aid for subsequent prolonged exercise in a warm or thermoneutral environment.

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