Expiratory muscle loading increases intercostal muscle blood flow during leg exercise in healthy humans

Author:

Athanasopoulos Dimitris12,Louvaris Zafeiris12,Cherouveim Evgenia2,Andrianopoulos Vasilis1,Roussos Charis1,Zakynthinos Spyros1,Vogiatzis Ioannis12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Critical Care Medicine and Pulmonary Services, Evangelismos Hospital, M. Simou, and G. P. Livanos Laboratories, and

2. Department of Physical Education and Sport Sciences, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece

Abstract

We investigated whether expiratory muscle loading induced by the application of expiratory flow limitation (EFL) during exercise in healthy subjects causes a reduction in quadriceps muscle blood flow in favor of the blood flow to the intercostal muscles. We hypothesized that, during exercise with EFL quadriceps muscle blood flow would be reduced, whereas intercostal muscle blood flow would be increased compared with exercise without EFL. We initially performed an incremental exercise test on eight healthy male subjects with a Starling resistor in the expiratory line limiting expiratory flow to ∼ 1 l/s to determine peak EFL exercise workload. On a different day, two constant-load exercise trials were performed in a balanced ordering sequence, during which subjects exercised with or without EFL at peak EFL exercise workload for 6 min. Intercostal (probe over the 7th intercostal space) and vastus lateralis muscle blood flow index (BFI) was calculated by near-infrared spectroscopy using indocyanine green, whereas cardiac output (CO) was measured by an impedance cardiography technique. At exercise termination, CO and stroke volume were not significantly different during exercise, with or without EFL (CO: 16.5 vs. 15.2 l/min, stroke volume: 104 vs. 107 ml/beat). Quadriceps muscle BFI during exercise with EFL (5.4 nM/s) was significantly ( P = 0.043) lower compared with exercise without EFL (7.6 nM/s), whereas intercostal muscle BFI during exercise with EFL (3.5 nM/s) was significantly ( P = 0.021) greater compared with that recorded during control exercise (0.4 nM/s). In conclusion, increased respiratory muscle loading during exercise in healthy humans causes an increase in blood flow to the intercostal muscles and a concomitant decrease in quadriceps muscle blood flow.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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