Abnormal oxygen uptake kinetic responses in women with type II diabetes mellitus

Author:

Regensteiner Judith G.123,Bauer Timothy A.1,Reusch Jane E. B.4,Brandenburg Suzanne L.1,Sippel Jeffrey M.5,Vogelsong Andria M.1,Smith Susan1,Wolfel Eugene E.3,Eckel Robert H.4,Hiatt William R.16

Affiliation:

1. Section of Vascular Medicine, Divisions of

2. Internal Medicine,

3. Cardiology,

4. Endocrinology and

5. Division of Pulmonary Medicine, University of Oregon Health Sciences Center, Portland, Oregon 97201

6. Geriatrics, Department of Medicine, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado 80262; and

Abstract

Persons with type II diabetes mellitus (DM), even without cardiovascular complications have a decreased maximal oxygen consumption (V˙o2 max) and submaximal oxygen consumption (V˙o2) during graded exercise compared with healthy controls. We evaluated the hypothesis that change in the rate ofV˙o2in response to the onset of constant-load exercise (measured byV˙o2-uptake kinetics) was slowed in persons with type II DM. Ten premenopausal women with uncomplicated type II DM, 10 overweight, nondiabetic women, and 10 lean, nondiabetic women had aV˙o2 maxtest. On two separate occasions, subjects performed 7-min bouts of constant-load bicycle exercise at workloads below and above the lactate threshold to enable measurements of V˙o2kinetics and heart rate kinetics (measuring rate of heart rate rise).V˙o2 maxwas reduced in subjects with type II DM compared with both lean and overweight controls ( P < 0.05). Subjects with type II DM had slowerV˙o2and heart rate kinetics than did controls at constant workloads below the lactate threshold. The data suggest a notable abnormality in the cardiopulmonary response at the onset of exercise in people with type II DM. The findings may reflect impaired cardiac responses to exercise, although an additional defect in skeletal muscle oxygen diffusion or mitochondrial oxygen utilization is also possible.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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