1. Relationship between reduced lower abdominal blood flows and heart rate in recovery following cycling exercise
- Author
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Teruichi Shimomitsu, Hisao Iwane, H. Higuchi, Toshihito Katsumura, Norio Murase, A. Sakamoto, Takuya Osada, and Takafumi Hamaoka
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Aorta ,Right femoral artery ,Physiology ,business.industry ,Blood flow ,Surgery ,Intensity (physics) ,Blood pressure ,Internal medicine ,medicine.artery ,Heart rate ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Doppler ultrasound ,business ,Cycling - Abstract
AIM To examine the blood flow (BF) response in the lower abdomen (LAB) in recovery following upright cycling exercise at three levels of relative maximum pulmonary oxygen consumption (VO(2max)) and the relationship of BF(LAB) to heart rate (HR) and target intensity. METHODS For 11 healthy subjects, BF (Doppler ultrasound) in the upper abdominal aorta (Ao) above the coeliac trunk and in the right femoral artery (RFA) was measured repeatedly for 720 s after the end of cycling exercises at target intensities of 30%, 50% and 85% VO(2max), respectively. Blood flow in the lower abdomen (BF(LAB)) can be measured by subtracting bilateral BF(FAs) (≈twofolds of BF(RFA)) from BF(Ao). Change in BF(LAB) (or BF(LAB) volume) at any point was evaluated by difference between change in BF(Ao) and in BF(FAs). Heart rate and blood pressure were also measured. RESULTS At 85% VO(2max), significant reduction in BF(LAB) by approx. 89% was shown at 90 s and remained until 360 s. At 50% VO(2max), reduction in BF(LAB) by approx. 33% was found at 90 s although it returned to pre-exercise value at 120 s. On the contrary at 30% VO(2max), BF(LAB) showed a light increase (
- Published
- 2011
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