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Studies on the Regulation of Respiration in Heavy Work
146
Citations
9
References
1946
Year
Aerobic ExerciseGas Exchange ProcessKinesiologyBioenergeticsExerciseApplied PhysiologyHealth SciencesMuscular ExerciseHypoxia (Medicine)Cardiorespiratory FitnessRespiration (Physiology)Oxygen BreathingPhysiologyExercise PhysiologyPulmonary PhysiologyLung MechanicsTissue OxygenationHeavy WorkMetabolismMedicine
Summary. The regulation of the respiration has been studied in different kinds of muscular exercise, in which the muscles are working under partly anaerobic conditions, viz.: heavy work with the legs, work with the arms and work in light CO‐poisoning. It is shown that a close relationship between the degree of anaerobiosis – as indicated by the concentration of the blood lactates – and a relatively high lung ventilation exists. It is further shown that when the muscles are working under partly anaerobic conditions (increased blood lactate concentration) oxygen breathing lowers the concentration of the blood lactates, and the ventilation, and that the lowering is proportional to the percentage of the oxygen in the inspired air. In rest and during light work (no increased blood lactate concentration) the breathing of oxygen on the other hand tends to produce a slight increase in ventilation and a decrease in alveolar pCO 2 . The effect of oxygen breathing on the ventilation during partly anaerobic work is not due to a decrease in acidity (see page 180) of the arterial blood or to the elimination of a previously existing arterial unsaturation. It is made probable, that the different effect of oxygen breathing in light and heavy work is due to the circumstance that oxygen breathing acts on the respiration in two different ways, viz. activating on the respiratory centre itself, and depressing on the activity of the chemoreceptors. It is assumed that in rest and during light work in which the activity of the chemoreceptors is only slight the activating effect on the respiratory centre over balances the depressing effect on the chemoreceptors, whereas in heavy work because of an increased chemoreceptor activity the depressing effect of high oxygen tension is able to overbalance considerably the effect on the respiratory centre. The results from the present experiments are best explained by the assumption that in heavy work or other kinds of work in which the muscles are working under partly anaerobic conditions a substance is produced which increases the ventilation reflexly through the chemoreceptors. The effect of oxygen breathing in heavy work then is 1. to decrease the production of this substance and 2. to depress the effect of this substance on the chemoreceptors. An identification of the active substance has not been attempted in this paper, but it is shown that it is not the lactic acid and that it has properties allowing it to appear in and disappear from the blood stream much more rapidly than does lactic acid. On the basis of these and earlier investigations the control of respiration during muscular work can be explained in the following way (see page 185–186): In light work the increase in ventilation is brought about mainly by reflexes from the working limbs. In heavy work (here defined as work in which the blood lactate concentration is increased – in this subject corresponding to oxygen uptakes above 1–1.5 1/min.) the further increase in ventilation is due mainly to an increasing production of the above mentioned active substance to which the arterial chemoreceptors are assumed to be sensitive.
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