Browsing by Subject "Exertion"
Now showing 1 - 4 of 4
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- ItemOpen AccessBlood lactate levels during exercise : the effects of exercise duration, bicarbonate infusion and beta-receptor antagonism(1985) Bertram, Sheila Rae; Noakes, Timothy DThis study examines factors that determine blood lactate accumulation during exercise in order to examine the opposing theories that such accumulation occurs either as a result of muscle anaerobiosis or an "overflow" of oxygen-independent glycolysis.
- ItemOpen AccessExercise and the heart : effects of exercise training on coronary artery disease and on myocardial function, metabolism and vulnerability to ventricular fibrillation(1981) Noakes, Timothy D; Opie, Lionel HThere is epidemiological and experimental evidence suggesting that exercise training may reduce the mortality rate from coronary heart disease, in particular the sudden death rate, and that it may improve the peak functional capacity of the heart. This thesis includes experimental work that is relevant to both these questions.
- ItemOpen AccessPost-exercise ketosis in non-diabetic subjects(1980) Koeslag, Johan Hermanus; Sloan, A WThe effect of exercise on the total ketone body (acetoacetate + D-3-hydroxybutyrate) concentrations in the blood was studied to find out whether the susceptibility of non-athletes, compared with athletes, to develop post-exercise ketosis is the result of the former's increased reliance on glycolysis during exercise. In the first experiments, use was made of the diving reflex to induce peripheral vasoconstriction during exercise in both physically trained and untrained subjects. It was hoped that under these circumstances athletes and non-athletes would utilize similar amounts of muscle glycogen during exercise, and therefore develop similar degrees of ketosis after exercise, if the glycogen content of the muscles was in fact the factor which determined post-exercise ketosis. Ten non-athletic subjects, six long-distance runners, and three competitive swimmers were therefore studied before, and for 9½ hours after swimming in the early morning. The last meal was eaten during the evening before the swim. On the first test day the subjects swam underwater for as far as they could go three times in succession. A week later the same distance was swum on the surface without breath-holding. There was no increase in the post-exercise blood ketone body concentrations in any of the subjects after either form of the exercise, compared with control day values (when the subjects fasted, but did not swim at 07h30). Similar results were obtained when healthy young medical students (aged 18 - 23 years; trained and untrained) performed maximal exercise for 15 minutes, or moderate exercise for up to 90 minutes, on a bicycle ergometer. When six older subjects (aged 30 - 51 years) exercised at 75 W for 90 minutes, three of them developed ketonaemia, which reached its maximum intensity about three hours after exercise. The exercising heart rates of these older subjects were similar to those of the younger non-athletic subjects who had performed the same exercise, but had not developed post-exercise ketosis., An extra 60 - 90 g sucrose in the diet of the subject who had developed the most marked post-exercise ketonaemia, abolished the response, whereas carbohydrate restriction intensified it. A protein-fat diet caused two well trained marathon runners to develop the highest post-exercise blood ketone body levels yet recorded (3,88 mmoles/l). Free fatty acid, glucose, growth hormone and insulin concentrations in the serum followed patterns different from the ketone body levels during, and for 7 ½ hours after exercise, but were also affected more by diet than by training. Post-exercise ketosis, previously ascribed to a lack of athletic training, could equally well be ascribed to the lower carbohydrate intake of sedentary subjects compared with athletes: the two marathon runners were estimated to eat about twice as much carbohydrate in their regular diet than the sedentary subject who had developed post-exercise ketonaemia without carbohydrate restriction. The final experiments were designed to find out whether post-exercise ketosis was the result of the low levels of glycogen in the body, or of the gluconeogenesis which occurs after exercise to replenish the carbohydrate stores. Twenty-four highly trained athletes were therefore studied after prolonged exercise following a protein-fat diet to induce post-exercise ketosis. Six of them were then given 100 g alanine to take by mouth, six ingested 100 g glucose, six ingested 100 g starch, and the remaining six acted as controls. It was found that both alanine and glucose ingestion reduced the blood ketone body concentration from about 2 mmoles/l to less than 0,4 mmoles/l in 3 hours. Starch had a minimal effect on the blood ketone body levels during the 5-hour observation period. Alanine and glucose exerted their antiketogenic effects in the context of widely different serum insulin, glucagon and growth hormone concentrations. Similar results were obtained in starvational ketosis, and even in normoketonaemic subjects. The results indicate that ketogenesis is not the result of gluconeogenesis, nor of a low insulin/glucagon (+ growth hormone) ratio in the blood. It is concluded that low levels of glycogen, or of a metabolic intermediary of glycogen metabolism (such as glucose-1-phosphate, or glucose-6-phosphate) in the liver is probably the single most important stimulus for ketogenesis after exercise and starvation.
- ItemOpen AccessThe role of the endogenous opioid system in thermoregulation during exercise(1988) Schwellnus, Martin Peter; Noakes, Timothy DIn man the metabolic heat produced during physical exercise stresses the thermoregulatory system, particularly if hot, humid environmental conditions prevail. It has recently been postulated that endogenous opioids may play a role in regulating body temperature at rest and because it has also been shown that blood levels of these substances increase during exercise, the possibility exists that endogenous opioids may play a role in thermoregulation during exercise. A study was conducted in two parts to determine the thermoregulatory response during exercise with and without pharmacologic blockade of the opioid receptor. In Part I nine healthy male subjects performed 30 minutes cycling at 50 % maximal aerobic capacity in an environmentally controlled laboratory. The subjects received either placebo, 2mg or 10mg naloxone hydrochloride in a randomized double-blind crossover fashion prior to the exercise test. Rectal temperatures were recorded at one-minute intervals and cardiorespiratory parameters were measured during the test. Water loss was calculated from differences in nude body weight. In part II eight male subjects performed a graded maximal cycle ergometer test after receiving either placebo or 2mg naloxone in a randomized double-blind crossover fashion. Rectal and sublingual temperatures were recorded before and after the test and oesophageal temperature was recorded at one-minute intervals during the test. Cardiorespiratory parameters were recorded during the test. The results of Part I show that rises in rectal temperature as well as calculated water losses were similar for placebo and after the administration of both 2mg and 10mg naloxone. Similarly, during maximal exercise (Part II) the rise in rectal and oesophageal temperatures was equivalent for placebo and 2mg naloxone but sublingual temperature failed to rise during exercise following the 2mg naloxone dose. Cardiorespiratory responses did not differ between placebo and naloxone tests in both Part I and Part II of the study. These results indicate that naloxone-mediated blockade of opioid receptors does not affect rectal and oesophageal temperature responses to either submaximal or maximal exercise. Naloxone appears to selectively alter the sublingual temperature response to exercise possibly by altering local blood flow. It is concluded that insofar as naloxone induced opioid receptor blockade provides a measure of the function of the endogenous opioid system, this study suggests that the endogenous opioid system does not play a significant role in thermoregulation during exercise.