Publication | Closed Access
Pulmonary control systems in exercise.
45
Citations
0
References
1980
Year
Pulmonary CareKinesiologyExerciseApplied PhysiologyLung HealthPulmonary Control SystemsHealth SciencesMechanobiologyPulmonary CirculationPhysical FitnessPulmonary MedicineRespiration (Physiology)Tissue Metabolic RateExercise PhysiologyPhysiologyPulmonary PhysiologyLung MechanicsElectrophysiologyMedicineChest Wall
We reviewed the response and regulation of alveolar ventilation, chest wall mechanics, and alveolar-to-arterial gas exchange to the demands imposed by increases in tissue metabolic rate. The primary mediator of iso-capnic exercise hyperpnea remains a dilemma--with conflicting evidence presented on both sides of a "CO2 flow" humoral hypothesis versus a "neurogenic" non-humoral hypothesis. The increased expiratory flows and tidal volumes at any given level of hyperpnea are achieved at a "minimum" of increased mechanical work exerted on the lung and chest wall, owing to a control system that has multiple levels of nervous integration (from cortex to spinal motor neuron) readily accessible to a wide variety of sensory information concerning the mechanical status of the lung and respiratory muscles. The maintenance of arterial PO2 in the face of a falling CVO2 during exercise was attributed to a precise regulation over factors that limit diffusion equilibrium and intra- and interregional ventilation: perfusion distributions in the lung. Finally, we noted that the near-optimal nature of these responses and their control during exercise had many exceptions in the real world of physical exercise outside of the laboratory.