Is the healthy respiratory system built just right, overbuilt, or underbuilt to meet the demands imposed by exercise?

Author:

Dempsey Jerome A.1,La Gerche Andre23,Hull James H.45

Affiliation:

1. John Robert Sutton Professor of Population Health Sciences, John Rankin Laboratory of Pulmonary Medicine, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin

2. Clinical Research Domain, Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute, Melbourne, Australia

3. National Center for Sports Cardiology, St. Vincent’s Hospital, Melbourne, Fitzroy, Australia

4. Department of Respiratory Medicine, Royal Brompton Hospital, London, United Kingdom

5. Institute of Sport, Exercise and Health (ISEH), University College London, United Kingdom

Abstract

In the healthy, untrained young adult, a case is made for a respiratory system (airways, pulmonary vasculature, lung parenchyma, respiratory muscles, and neural ventilatory control system) that is near ideally designed to ensure a highly efficient, homeostatic response to exercise of varying intensities and durations. Our aim was then to consider circumstances in which the intra/extrathoracic airways, pulmonary vasculature, respiratory muscles, and/or blood-gas distribution are underbuilt or inadequately regulated relative to the demands imposed by the cardiovascular system. In these instances, the respiratory system presents a significant limitation to O2 transport and contributes to the occurrence of locomotor muscle fatigue, inhibition of central locomotor output, and exercise performance. Most prominent in these examples of an “underbuilt” respiratory system are highly trained endurance athletes, with additional influences of sex, aging, hypoxic environments, and the highly inbred equine. We summarize by evaluating the relative influences of these respiratory system limitations on exercise performance and their impact on pathophysiology and provide recommendations for future investigation.

Funder

National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute

National Heart Foundation of Australia

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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