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Cardiovascular Center and Department of Internal Medicine, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa 52242; and Departments of Medicine and of Cellular and Molecular Physiology, Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, Hershey, Pennsylvania 17033
The purpose of the present study was to
determine the effect of leg exercise training on sympathetic nerve
responses at rest and during dynamic exercise. Six men were trained by
using high-intensity interval and prolonged continuous one-legged
cycling 4 day/wk, 40 min/day, for 6 wk. Heart rate, mean arterial
pressure (MAP), and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA; peroneal
nerve) were measured during 3 min of upright dynamic one-legged knee
extensions at 40 W before and after training. After
training, peak oxygen uptake in the trained leg increased 19 ± 2%
(P < 0.01). At rest, heart rate
decreased from 77 ± 3 to 71 ± 6 beats/min (P < 0.01) with no significant changes in MAP (91 ± 7 to 91 ± 11 mmHg) and MSNA (29 ± 3 to 28 ± 1 bursts/min). During
exercise, both heart rate and MAP were lower after training (108 ± 5 to 96 ± 5 beats/min and 132 ± 8 to 119 ± 4 mmHg, respectively, during the third minute of exercise;
P < 0.01). MSNA decreased similarly
from rest during the first 2 min of exercise both before and after
training. However, MSNA was significantly less during the third minute
of exercise after training (32 ± 2 to 22 ± 3 bursts/min;
P < 0.01). This training effect on
MSNA remained when MSNA was expressed as bursts per 100 heartbeats.
Responses to exercise in five untrained control subjects were not
different at 0 and 6 wk. These results demonstrate that exercise
training prolongs the decrease in MSNA during upright leg exercise and
indicates that attenuation of MSNA to exercise reported with forearm
training also occurs with leg training.
muscle sympathetic nerve activity; microneurography; muscle reflexes; exercise
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