The effect of high-intensity exercise on the respiratory capacity of sceletal muscle

1990 
The effect of high-intensity exercise on the respiratory capacity of skeletal muscle was studied in horses which ran five 600-m bouts on a track with 2 min of rest between exercise bouts, or once to fatigue on a treadmill at an intensity that elicited the maximal oxygen uptake. Venous blood and biopsy samples of the middle gluteal muscle were collected at rest, after each exercise bout, and 30 and 60 min post-exercise. Blood samples were analyzed for lactate concentration and pH and muscle samples for metabolites, pH, and respiratory capacity. Venous blood and muscle pH declined to 6.91±0.02 and 6.57±0.02, respectively, after the fifth track run and to 6.98±0.02 and 6.71±0.07, respectively, after treadmill running. Muscle metabolite changes were consistent with the metabolic response to high-intensity exercise. Muscle respiratory capacity declined >20% (P<0.05) after a single exercise bout and was 45% of the control value after the fifth track run. Tissue respiration was depressed 60 min post-exercise but was normal 24 h later. These observations suggest that high-intensity exercise impairs the respiratory capacity of the working muscle. Although this occurred in parallel with reductions in pH, other factors could be responsible for this response.
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