Catecholamines, heart rate, and oxygen uptake during exercise in persons with spinal cord injury

Author:

Schmid Andreas1,Huonker Martin1,Barturen Jose-Miguel1,Stahl Fabian1,Schmidt-Trucksäss Arno1,König Daniel1,Grathwohl Dominik1,Lehmann Manfred2,Keul Joseph1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Preventive and Rehabilitative Sports Medicine, Center for Internal Medicine, University of Freiburg, D-79106 Freiburg; and

2. Department of Physical Performance Medicine, Center for Internal Medicine, University of Ulm, D-89075 Ulm, Germany

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate the influence of different injury levels in persons with spinal cord injury (SCI) on epinephrine (Epi) and norepinephrine (NE) at rest and during graded wheelchair exercise and the related changes in heart rate and O2 uptake (V˙o 2). Twenty tetraplegics (Tetra), 10 high-lesion paraplegics (HLPara), 20 paraplegics with SCI below T5 (MLPara), and 18 able-bodied, nonhandicapped persons (AB) were examined. Because of the higher level of interruption of the sympathetic pathways, Tetra persons showed lower Epi and NE at rest and only slight increases during exercise compared with all other groups; the Tetra subjects’ impaired cardiac sympathetic innervation caused restricted cardioacceleration and strongly reduced maximalV˙o 2. When compared with AB persons, HLPara had comparable NE but lower Epi levels as a result of partial innervation of the noradrenergic system and denervation of the adrenal medulla. MLPara subjects showed an augmented basal and exercise-induced upper spinal thoracic sympathetic activity compared with AB subjects. The increase in heart rate in relation toV˙o 2 was higher in HLPara because of a smaller stroke volume as a result of venous blood pooling. The different exercise response in persons with SCI is a result of the interruption of pathways in the spinal cord to the peripheral sympathetic nervous system in addition to the motor paralysis.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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