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  4. The effects of age on dyspnea and respiratory mechanical and neural responses to exercise in healthy men
 
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The effects of age on dyspnea and respiratory mechanical and neural responses to exercise in healthy men

Citation Link: https://doi.org/10.15480/882.8835
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2023-08
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Macaskill, William  
Hoffman, Ben  
Johnson, Michael A.
Sharpe, Graham  
Rands, Joshua
Wotherspoon, Shoena E.
Gevorkov, Yaroslav  
Bildverarbeitungssysteme E-2 (H)  
Kolbe-Alexander, Tracy  
Mills, Dean  
TORE-DOI
10.15480/882.8835
TORE-URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11420/44235
Journal
Physiological reports  
Volume
11
Issue
16
Article Number
e15794
Citation
Physiological Reports 11 (16): e15794 (2023-08)
Publisher DOI
10.14814/phy2.15794
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85168487505
The respiratory muscle pressure generation and inspiratory and expiratory neuromuscular recruitment patterns in younger and older men were compared during exercise, alongside descriptors of dyspnea. Healthy younger (n = 8, 28 ± 5 years) and older (n = 8, 68 ± 4 years) men completed a maximal incremental cycling test. Esophageal, gastric (Pga) and transdiaphragmatic pressures, and electromyography (EMG) of the crural diaphragm were measured using a micro-transducer and EMG catheter. EMG of the parasternal intercostals, sternocleidomastoids, and rectus abdominis were measured using skin surface electrodes. After the exercise test, participants completed a questionnaire to evaluate descriptors of dyspnea. Pga at end-expiration, Pga expiratory tidal swings, and the gastric pressure–time product (PTPga) at absolute and relative minute ventilation were higher (p < 0.05) for older compared to younger men. There were no differences in EMG responses between older and younger men. Younger men were more likely to report shallow breathing (p = 0.005) than older men. Our findings showed younger and older men had similar respiratory neuromuscular activation patterns and reported different dyspnea descriptors, and that older men had greater expiratory muscle pressure generation during exercise. Greater expiratory muscle pressures in older men may be due to compensatory mechanisms designed to offset increasing airway resistance due to aging. These results may have implications for exercise-induced expiratory muscle fatigue in older men.
Subjects
aging
dyspnea
exercise
mechanical
neural
DDC Class
610: Medicine, Health
Publication version
publishedVersion
Lizenz
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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