Circulation, Vol 78, 1060-1071, Copyright © 1988 by American Heart Association
K Wasserman
The primary role of the heart is to provide energy for the circulatory
transport of oxygen (O2) to cells at rates commensurate with their
metabolic activity. At rest, even a "sick" heart may be capable of
transporting O2 adequately. But during exercise, the increase in O2
required by muscle cells demands that their blood flow be increased. The
supply of O2 needed to meet the O2 requirement for muscle mitochondrial
high-energy phosphate generation during exercise is a critical function of
the circulation. Thus, the adequacy of cardiovascular function can be
estimated, noninvasively, from the pattern of O2 uptake in response to an
exercise stimulus. While arterial O2 tension (PaO2) is dependent on
pulmonary function (except for intracardiac right-to-left shunt), the mass
transfer of O2 (VO2) between the cells and lungs depends on pulmonary blood
flow (i.e., cardiac output) and O2 concentration difference between the
pulmonary arterial and pulmonary venous blood, C(a-v)O2 (Fick principle).
Thus, VO2 in the first 15 seconds of exercise can be used to describe the
initial increase in pulmonary blood flow and stroke volume, while the
subsequent rise in VO2 results from the further increase in VO2 in response
to work rate increase are used to detect circulatory disturbances. Also,
the rate of CO2 output (VCO2) has been valuable in the assessment of
cardiovascular function when related to VO2. Inadequate O2 availability
results in anaerobic metabolism, causing increased muscle lactic acid
production. At the pH of cell water, most of the hydrogen ions produced
with lactate are buffered by bicarbonate. The CO2 generated by the
buffering reaction (22 ml for each milliequivalent) causes a net increase
in VCO2 relative to VO2 at the work rate at which buffering begins. This
provides a useful estimate of the anaerobic threshold. Thus, study of the
dynamic coupling of external to cellular respiration during a work rate
stimulus provides valuable, direct, and noninvasive information about
cardiovascular mechanisms in health and disease.
ARTICLES
The Dickinson W. Richards lecture. New concepts in assessing cardiovascular function
Department of Medicine, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, Torrance 90509.
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