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Respiratory muscle training in athletes with cervical spinal cord injury: effects on cardiopulmonary function and exercise capacity

Authors :
Cameron M. Gee
Christopher West
A. William Sheel
Alexandra M. Williams
Neil D. Eves
Source :
The Journal of Physiology. 597:3673-3685
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

KEY POINTS The effect of combined inspiratory and expiratory muscle training on resting and reflexive cardiac function, as well as exercise capacity, in individuals with cervical spinal cord injury (SCI) is presently unknown. Six weeks of combined inspiratory and expiratory muscle training enhances both inspiratory and expiratory muscle strength in highly-trained athletes with cervical SCI with no significant effect on lung function. There was a significant decrease in left-ventricular filling and stroke volume at rest in response to 45° head-up tilt, which is irreversible by respiratory muscle training. Combined inspiratory and expiratory muscle training increased peak aerobic work rate and reduced end-expiratory lung volumes during exercise, which may have implications for left-ventricular filling during exercise. ABSTRACT To investigate the pulmonary, cardiovascular and exercise responses to combined inspiratory and expiratory respiratory muscle training (RMT) in athletes with tetraplegia, six wheelchair rugby athletes (five males and one female, aged 33 ± 5 years) completed 6 weeks of pressure threshold RMT, 2 sessions day-1 on 5 days week-1 . Resting pulmonary and cardiac function, exercise capacity, exercising lung volumes and field-based exercise performance were assessed at pre-RMT, post-RMT and after a 6-week no RMT period. RMT enhanced maximal inspiratory (pre- vs. post-RMT: -76 ± 15 to -106 ± 23 cmH2 O, P = 0.002) and expiratory (59 ± 26 to 73 ± 32 cmH2 O, P = 0.007) mouth pressures, as well as peak expiratory flow (6.74 ± 1.51 vs. 7.32 ± 1.60 L/s, P

Details

ISSN :
14697793 and 00223751
Volume :
597
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....933aac87b80b22634591b1fbf48260d7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1113/jp277943