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Title: Is there a competition for oxygen availability between respiratory and limb muscles? Author: de Bisschop C, Beloka S, Groepenhoff H, van der Plas MN, Overbeek MJ, Naeije R, Guenard H. Journal: Respir Physiol Neurobiol; 2014 Jun 01; 196():8-16. PubMed ID: 24582718. Abstract: If a competition between the oxygen demands of limb and respiratory muscles happens, hypoxia may favor redistribution of blood flow from peripheral to respiratory muscles during heavy exercise. This hypothesis was tested in eighteen lowlanders and 27 highlanders at 4350m altitude. During an incremental exercise, the regional tissue oxygen saturation (rSO2) and tissue hemoglobin concentration ([Hbt]) of the intercostal muscles and vastus medialis were monitored simultaneously by NIRS. The intercostal and vastus medialis rSO2 values were lower at altitude than at sea level (-10%, p<0.001) and decreased similarly during incremental exercise (p<0.001) while [Hbt] values increased. At maximal exercise, the intercostal rSO2 was lower than the vastus medialis rSO2 in lowlanders (-7%, p<0.001). In highlanders the time patterns were similar but intercostal rSO2 was less decreased at exercise (p<0.05). Maximal exercise performed in hypoxia did not alter the kinetics of rSO2 and [Hbt] in peripheral muscles. These findings do not favor the hypothesis of blood flow redistribution.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]