Respiratory Medicine
Volume 100, Issue 11 , Pages 1896-1906, November 2006

Respiratory muscle energetics during exercise in healthy subjects and patients with COPD

  • Giorgio Scano

      Affiliations

    • Department of Internal Medicine, Respiratory Disease Section, University of Florence, Italy
    • Fondazione Don C. Gnocchi, IRCCS, Pozzolatico, Florence, Italy
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Department of Internal Medicine, Section of Clinical Immunology, Allergology and Respiratory Disease, University of Florence, Viale Morgagni 87, 50134 Firenze, Italy. Tel.: +390554296414; fax: +39055412867.
  • ,
  • Michela Grazzini

      Affiliations

    • Department of Internal Medicine, Respiratory Disease Section, University of Florence, Italy
    • Fondazione Don C. Gnocchi, IRCCS, Pozzolatico, Florence, Italy
  • ,
  • Loredana Stendardi

      Affiliations

    • Department of Internal Medicine, Respiratory Disease Section, University of Florence, Italy
    • Fondazione Don C. Gnocchi, IRCCS, Pozzolatico, Florence, Italy
  • ,
  • Francesco Gigliotti

      Affiliations

    • Department of Internal Medicine, Respiratory Disease Section, University of Florence, Italy
    • Fondazione Don C. Gnocchi, IRCCS, Pozzolatico, Florence, Italy

Received 20 September 2005; accepted 24 February 2006. published online 05 May 2006.

Summary 

The energy expenditure required by the respiratory muscles during exercise is a function of their work rate, cost of breathing, and efficiency. During exercise, ventilatory requirements increase further exacerbating the potential imbalance between inspiratory muscle load and capacity. High level of exercise intensity in conjunction with contracting respiratory muscles is the reason for respiratory muscle fatigue in healthy subjects. Available evidence would suggest that fatigue of the diaphragm and other respiratory muscles is an important mechanism involved in redistribution of blood flow. Reflex mechanisms of sympathoexcitation are triggered in fatigued diaphragm during heavy exercise when cardiac output is not sufficient to adequately meet the high metabolic requirements of both respiratory and limb musculature. It is very likely that local changes in locomotor muscle blood flow may occur during exhaustive endurance exercise and that changes may have important effect on O2 transport to the working locomotor muscles and, therefore, on their fatigability. In a condition when the respiratory muscles receive their share of blood flow at the expense of limb locomotor muscles, minimizing mechanical work of breathing and therefore its metabolic cost allows a greater amount of cardiac output to be available to be delivered to working limb muscles. Malfunction in any of the multiple components responsible for circulatory flow and O2 delivery will limit the blood supply therefore inhibiting the supply of O2 and the energy substrate to the contracting muscles. Studies are needed to overcome these limitations.

Keywords: Blood flow, Mechanics, Muscle fatigue

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 Presented in part to the European Respiratory Society Annual Congress, 8 September, 2004,Glasgow, UK.

PII: S0954-6111(06)00110-7

doi:10.1016/j.rmed.2006.02.030

Respiratory Medicine
Volume 100, Issue 11 , Pages 1896-1906, November 2006