How do stroke volume and cardiac output respond to heavy exercise and body position in well-trained athletes compared to non-athletes?
In well-trained athletes, larger oxygen transport capacity compared to non-athletes is driven by a larger stroke volume, with significant variations based on body position.
Abstract Eight well trained athletes (cyclists) with large dimensions of the circulatory system were studied with heart catheterization at rest and during exercise at 800 and 1,600 kpm/min both while sitting and supine. The results are compared with data from non‐athletes. The cardiac output at rest and during work showed the same relation to the oxygen uptake as in nonathletes. The cardiac output was less in the sitting than in the supine position by 2.6 1/min at rest and 1.8 1/min during heavy work, due to a smaller stroke volume in the sitting position in both groups. On transition from rest to exercise the stroke volume increased 9 % in the supine and 48 % in the sitting position. After these initial changes the stroke volume remained constant during continued exercise with the heavier load in both body positions. The difference in stroke volume between supine and sitting position averaged 43 ml at rest and 9 ml during heavy exercise. The stroke volume during work in the supine position showed the same relation to the blood volume as in the nonathletes. The stroke volume was larger than expected from the size of the heart, when compared with the previously demonstrated relationship in nonathletes. The rate of work, performed at pulse rate 170, bore approximately the same relationship to the stroke volume during exercise in both groups. The larger oxygen transport capacity of these athletes as compared to nonathletes is explained by a larger stroke volume. During exercise the ventricular filling pressures were higher than in nonathletes.
Bevegård et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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