Cardiovascular drift in trained paraplegic and able-bodied individuals during prolonged wheelchair exercise: effect of fluid replacement

Author:

Zacharakis Emmanouil D.1,Kounalakis Stylianos N.2,Nassis George P.3,Geladas Nickos D.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Games and Sports, Faculty of Physical Education and Sport Science, University of Athens, Athens, Greece.

2. Human Performance–Rehabilitation Laboratory, Faculty of Physical and Cultural Education, Evelpidon Hellenic Military University, 16672 Vari, Greece.

3. Department of Sports Medicine and Biology of Exercise, Faculty of Physical Education, and Sport Science, University of Athens, 17237 Dafne, Greece.

Abstract

The progressive heart rate (HR) increase and stroke volume (SV) decline during prolonged constant-load leg exercise signifies cardiovascular drift (CVdrift); fluid replacement is known to minimize this phenomenon. Like their able-bodied counterparts (AB), paraplegic athletes undergo prolonged exercise during training and competition, which could result in CVdrift. The aim of this study is to address the role of rehydration on preventing CVdrift in spinal cord injured (SCI) paraplegic athletes. Eight SCI athletes with an injury level between C7 and T6 and 9 AB subjects performed 60-min constant-load exercise on a wheelchair ergometer in a thermo-neutral environment. No fluid was taken in 1 trial, whereas 85% of sweat losses were replaced by drinking water in another trial. Cardic output (CO), SV, HR, and oral temperature (Tor) were determined during exercise. Prolonged exercise resulted in similar HR (18 beats·min−1 for AB and 12 beats·min−1 for SCI) and Tor (0.63 °C for AB and 0.71 °C for SCI) elevation and SV decline (−8.5 mL·beat−1 for AB and −5.5 mL·beat−1 for SCI), whereas CO remained unchanged. Water intake restrained the exercise-induced hyperthermia and resulted in smaller SV decline (−4.0 mL for AB and −3.0 mL for SCI, p < 0.01). In conclusion, CVdrift was similar in SCI and AB subjects during prolonged wheelchair exercise. Likewise, the beneficial effects of hydration in both groups were analogous.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Physiology (medical),Nutrition and Dietetics,Physiology,General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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