Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5593527 | Journal of Thermal Biology | 2017 | 26 Pages |
Abstract
There are a number of mechanisms thought to be responsible for the onset of fatigue during exercise-induced hyperthermia. A greater understanding of the way in which fatigue develops during exercise could be gleaned from the studies which have examined the maintenance of cerebral blood flow through the process of cerebral autoregulation. Given that cerebral blood flow is a measure of the cerebral haemodynamics, and might reflect a level of brain activation, it is useful to understand the implications of this response during exercise and in the development of fatigue. It is known that cerebral blood flow is significantly altered under certain conditions such as altitude and exacerbated during exercise induced - hyperthermia. In this brief review we consider the processes of cerebral autoregulation predominantly through the measurement of cerebral blood flow and contrast these responses between exercise undertaken in normothermic versus heat stress conditions in order to draw some conclusions about the role cerebral blood flow might play in determining fatigue.
Keywords
RCPVO2maxCMRO2N2OPaCO2RPEpCO2CBFElectroencephalographyMRINitrous oxideCerebral oxygenationSPECTMagnetic resonance imagingCerebral autoregulationPositron emission tomographyRespiratory compensation pointcerebral blood flowMaximal oxygen consumptionFatigueCNSTemperaturerating of perceived exertioncentral nervous systemPartial pressure of carbon dioxidearterial carbon dioxide pressureBrainEEGPETBlood flow
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Authors
Caroline V. Robertson, Frank E. Marino,