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Anaerobic thresholdreview of the concept and directions for future research

 

作者: GEORGE BROOKS,  

 

期刊: Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise  (OVID Available online 1985)
卷期: Volume 17, issue 1  

页码: 22-31

 

ISSN:0195-9131

 

年代: 1985

 

出版商: OVID

 

关键词: LACTATE PRODUCTION;TRACER KINETICS;SKELETAL MUSCLE;HEART;LIVER;TRAINING;LACTATE CLEARANCE;LDH;ENZYME KINETICS;GLYCOLYSIS;GLYCOGENOLYSIS

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

G.A. BROOKS. Anaerobic threshold: review of the concept and directions for future research.Med. Sci. Sports Exerc., Vol. 17, No. 1, pp. 22–31, 1985. The concentration of lactate in the blood is the result of (1) those processes which produce lactate and contribute to its appearance in the blood and (2) those processes which catabolize lactate after its removal from the blood. Consequently, the concentration of lactate in the blood provides minimal information about the rate of lactate production in muscle. The accumulation of lactate beyond the lactate threshold [T(lact)] does provide an indication that the mechanisms of lactate removal fail to keep pace with lactate production. Lactate is produced in skeletal muscle as a direct result of increased metabolic rate and glycolytic carbon flow. Factors which influence lactate production in muscle include: the Vmaxof lactic dehydrogenase (LDH), which is several times greater than the combined activities of enzymes which provide alternative pathways of pyruvate metabolism; the kMof LDH for pyruvate, which is sufficiently low to assure maximal stimulation of LDH in the conversion of pyruvate to lactate; and the K‘eqof pyruvate to lactate conversion, which exceeds 1000. Recent studies on dog gracilis musclein situclearly indicate that lactate production occurs in contracting pure red muscle for reasons other than an O2limitation on mitochondrial ATP production. In addition to failure of the essential assumption of the anaerobic threshold [T(an)] hypothesis that there exist limitations on O2availability in muscles of healthy individuals during submaximal exercise, several groups of investigators have produced results which indicate that parameters associated with changes in pulmonary minute ventilation [i.e., the ventilatory threshold, T(vent)] do not always track changes in blood lactate concentration. Therefore, the T(an) hypothesis fails on the bases of theory and prediction. A series of kinetic tracer experiments to better understand lactate kinetics during exercise is proposed.

 

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