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Effect of prolonged exercise on arterial oxygen saturation in athletes susceptible to exercise‐induced hypoxemia
15
Citations
23
References
2006
Year
Physical ActivityAerobic ExerciseProlonged ExerciseArterial Oxygen SaturationProlonged Endurance ExerciseKinesiologyBody CompositionExercisePhysical ExerciseApplied PhysiologySport PhysiologyHealth SciencesHypoxia (Medicine)Endurance ExerciseExercise ScienceMaximal Incremental TestCardiovascular DiseasePhysiologyExercise PhysiologyTissue OxygenationAthletic Training
This study examined the effect of prolonged endurance exercise on the development of exercise-induced hypoxemia (EIH) in athletes who had previously displayed EIH during an incremental maximal exercise test. Five male and three female endurance-trained athletes participated. Susceptibility to EIH was confirmed through a maximal incremental exercise test and defined as a reduction in the saturation of arterial oxygen (SpO(2)) of >/=4% from rest. Sixty minutes of running was conducted, on a separate day, at an oxygen consumption corresponding to 95% of ventilatory threshold. Immediately following the 60 min exercise bout, athletes commenced a time trial to exhaustion at 95% maximal oxygen consumption (VO(2max)). The reduction in SpO(2) was significantly greater during the maximal incremental test, than during the 60 min, or time trial to exhaustion (-8.8+/-1.4%, -3.3+/-1.1%, and -4.1+/-2.3%, P<0.05, respectively). The degree of desaturation during the 60 min was significantly related to the relative intensity of exercise at 95% ventilatory threshold (adjusted r(2)=0.54, P=0.02). In conclusion, athletes who did not exercise at greater than 73% VO(2max) during 60 min of endurance exercise did not display EIH, despite being previously susceptible during an incremental maximal test.
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1986 | 4K | |
1984 | 551 | |
1992 | 377 | |
1989 | 237 | |
1998 | 233 | |
1998 | 222 | |
1991 | 163 | |
1995 | 120 | |
2002 | 112 | |
1998 | 99 |
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