The lower peak lactate accumulation in blood ([La(b)](p)) at altitude may be associated with a reduced maximal glycolytic flux. Based on certain assumptions, the latter can be indirectly evaluated in vivo, during short supramaximal exercises, by measuring the maximal rate of lactate accumulation in blood (?[L?a(b)](max)). ?[L?a(b)](max) was determined on six white subjects at sea level (SL1), after ~1 wk (Alt1) and 4 wk (Alt2) of a 35-day sojourn at 5,050 m, and 1 wk after return to sea level (SL2). The subjects performed exercises of increasing duration (5, 15, 25, 35, 45 s or until exhaustion) on a bicycle ergometer at loads = 200% of the individual ?(max). The latter was previously determined in each condition as the greatest work rate that could be sustained for 2-4 min during an incremental exercise. Net [La(b)] accumulation (?[L?a(b)]) was measured after each exercise bout. ?[L?a(b)] resulted to be linearly related to exercise duration. The slopes of the individual ?[L?a(b)] vs. exercise duration lines were taken as ?[L?a(b)](max). Exhaustion times were ~30-45 s in all conditions. [La(b)](p) (in mM) during recovery after the exhaustive load was higher at SL1 (10.22 ± 1.09; x ± SD) than at Alt1 (5.08 ± 0.82), Alt2 (8.13 ± 2.67), and SL2 (8.18 ± 1.43). ?[L?a(b)](max) was lower at Alt1 (0.09 ± 0.02) and at Alt2 (0.17 ± 0.05) than at SL1 (0.25 ± 0.05) and SL2 (0.23 ± 0.06). Both [La(b)](p) and ?[L?a(b)](max) increased during acclimatization. It is concluded that the lower [La(b)](p) at altitude was associated with a reduced ?[L?a(b)](max). In the presence of a presumably normal maximal potential activity of glycolytic enzymes, as described by several authors, the reduced ?[L?a(b)](max) is indicative of an upstream inhibition of glycolysis at altitude.

Maximal rate of blood lactate accumulation during exercise at altitude in humans

Marzorati M;Marconi C;
1995

Abstract

The lower peak lactate accumulation in blood ([La(b)](p)) at altitude may be associated with a reduced maximal glycolytic flux. Based on certain assumptions, the latter can be indirectly evaluated in vivo, during short supramaximal exercises, by measuring the maximal rate of lactate accumulation in blood (?[L?a(b)](max)). ?[L?a(b)](max) was determined on six white subjects at sea level (SL1), after ~1 wk (Alt1) and 4 wk (Alt2) of a 35-day sojourn at 5,050 m, and 1 wk after return to sea level (SL2). The subjects performed exercises of increasing duration (5, 15, 25, 35, 45 s or until exhaustion) on a bicycle ergometer at loads = 200% of the individual ?(max). The latter was previously determined in each condition as the greatest work rate that could be sustained for 2-4 min during an incremental exercise. Net [La(b)] accumulation (?[L?a(b)]) was measured after each exercise bout. ?[L?a(b)] resulted to be linearly related to exercise duration. The slopes of the individual ?[L?a(b)] vs. exercise duration lines were taken as ?[L?a(b)](max). Exhaustion times were ~30-45 s in all conditions. [La(b)](p) (in mM) during recovery after the exhaustive load was higher at SL1 (10.22 ± 1.09; x ± SD) than at Alt1 (5.08 ± 0.82), Alt2 (8.13 ± 2.67), and SL2 (8.18 ± 1.43). ?[L?a(b)](max) was lower at Alt1 (0.09 ± 0.02) and at Alt2 (0.17 ± 0.05) than at SL1 (0.25 ± 0.05) and SL2 (0.23 ± 0.06). Both [La(b)](p) and ?[L?a(b)](max) increased during acclimatization. It is concluded that the lower [La(b)](p) at altitude was associated with a reduced ?[L?a(b)](max). In the presence of a presumably normal maximal potential activity of glycolytic enzymes, as described by several authors, the reduced ?[L?a(b)](max) is indicative of an upstream inhibition of glycolysis at altitude.
1995
altitude acclimatization
chronic hypoxia
glycolysis
lactate paradox
lactic capacity
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/407048
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