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Q = HR x SV Q = cardiac output HR = heart rate SV = stroke volume. Cardiac Output. end diastolic volume (EDV) - volume of blood in ventricles at the end of diastole Frank-Starling Law increase in contractility increases volume pumped per beat venous return average aortic blood pressure
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Q = HR x SV Q = cardiac output HR = heart rate SV = stroke volume Cardiac Output
end diastolic volume (EDV) - volume of blood in ventricles at the end of diastole Frank-Starling Law increase in contractility increases volume pumped per beat venous return average aortic blood pressure strength of ventricular contraction Regulation of Stroke Volume
Components of Blood • Plasma • Liquid portion of blood • Contains ions, proteins, hormones • Cells • Red blood cells • Contain hemoglobin to carry oxygen • White blood cells • Platelets • Important in blood clotting • Hematocrit • Percent of blood composed of cells
hematocrit is the percentage of whole blood which is composed of solid material cells, platelets etc the blood is composed primarily of water (~55 %) called plasma the hematocrit would be 45 can vary between 40 and 50
Cardiac Output during Exercise • Q increases in direct proportion to the metabolic rate required to perform task • linear relationship between Q and VO2 • remember... Q = HR x SV
Stroke Volume and Heart Rate during Exercise • in untrained or moderately trained individuals stroke volume plateaus ~ 40% VO2 max • at work rates > 40% VO2 max, Q increases by HR alone • See fig 9.17
The Fick Equation • VO2 = Q x (a-vO2 diff) • VO2 is equal to the product of cardiac output and arterial-mixed venous difference • an increase in either Q or a-vO2 difference will result in an increase in VO2max
Redistribution of Blood Flow • Increased blood flow to working skeletal muscle • Reduced blood flow to less active organs • Liver, kidneys, GI tract
Prolonged Exercise • Cardiac output is maintained • Gradual decrease in stroke volume • Gradual increase in heart rate • Cardiovascular drift • Due to dehydration and increased skin blood flow (rising body temperature) .
Increases in Temperature • Receptors on skin first sense changes • receptors also located in spinal cord and hypothalamus respond to core temp changes • Stimulates sweat glands - increases evaporation • Increases skin blood flow - vasodilation
Take Home Message • During exercise, evaporation is the most important method of heat loss • Heat production must be matched with heat dissipation or hyperthermia will ensue
Metabolic heat production increases in proportion to the exercise intensity • Convective and radiative heat loss do not increase with intensity as temp gradient between body and environment does not change significantly
Hyperthermia • Increased core temperature to the point that physiological functions are impaired • Contributing factors • dehydration • electrolyte loss • failure of cooling mechanisms to match heat production
Other factors related to hydration • Water as a solvent • Ionic concentration • Neuro-muscular coordination • Contractile function • Reactions • Macronutrient formation • Glycogen • Proper digestion and waste removal
Amount of fluids ingested • Small amounts of fluid ingestion do not entirely attenuate • Elevation in core temperature • Elevation in heart rate • Rating of perceived exertion
Moderate and Large fluid intake resulted in significantly different responses than No or Small fluid intake Small = 300 ml/hr Moderate=700 ml/hr Large=1200 ml/hr From Coyle SSE #50 GSSI
Effects of dehydration on cardiovascular parameters versus % body weight loss From Coyle SSE #50 GSSI
Recommendations • Drink as much as can be tolerated up to 1250 ml/h for 68 kg/150 lb individual • Drink should contain 4-8 % CHO to optimize absorption • Adjust volume per body weight as ratio of 68 kg • E.g. 50 kg> 50/68 * 1250 = 925 ml/hr