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Cardiorespiratory and muscle oxygenation responses to low-load/high-repetition resistance exercises in COPD and healthy controls.

Single-limb exercises have been used as a strategy to improve aerobic exercise tolerance in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) by alleviating the cardiopulmonary demand. We asked whether this strategy would also apply to cardiorespiratory demand and amount of work performed during single-limb and two-limb low-load/high-repetition resistance exercises in 20 patients with COPD [forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1 ) = 1.0 liters, 38% of predicted] and 15 age-, sex-, and activity-matched healthy controls. Peak ventilation, peak oxygen consumption (V̇o2 ), and peak heart rate (HR) were assessed to document cardiorespiratory demand during shoulder flexion and knee extension exercises while exercise tolerance was assessed by the total amount of work achieved. In addition, changes in myoglobin-deoxyhemoglobin level (Δdeoxy-[Hb/Mb]) were measured during single-limb knee extension. In COPD, single-limb shoulder flexion and knee extension elicited higher localized workloads than two-limb exercises (21 and 24% higher workloads for the former exercise) while cardiopulmonary demand was 8-16% higher during two-limb exercises. When expressed as a percentage of peak values achieved during incremental cycle ergometry, peak V̇O2 and HR were similarly high during single-limb shoulder flexion and knee extension exercises, representing 90% of peak HR and 60% of peak V̇O2 . Apart from single-limb knee extension, cardiorespiratory demand per kilogram work during low-load/high-repetition knee extension and shoulder flexion exercises was higher in patients with COPD than in healthy controls (range 27-122%, P < 0.0125). Δdeoxy-[Hb/Mb] of the quadriceps during knee extension was similar between the two groups, while Δdeoxy-[Hb/Mb] per kilogram work was higher in patients with COPD. We conclude that 1) in patients with COPD, single-limb exercises resulted in lower peak cardiorespiratory demand as well as higher localized workloads compared with two-limb exercises; 2) compared with healthy controls, the cardiorespiratory demand, either expressed per unit of work or relative to peak capacity, was higher in patients with COPD than in controls during low-load/high-repetition resistance exercises, irrespective of the involvement of one or two limbs or of the upper or lower extremity; 3) quadriceps muscle deoxygenation per unit of work during low-load/high-repetition knee extension was increased in COPD compared with controls; and 4) single- and two-limb low-load/high-repetition knee extension and shoulder flexion resistance exercises imposed a similar burden on the cardiorespiratory system, resulting in a higher cardiorespiratory demand per kilogram work performed during shoulder flexion compared with knee extension, in both COPD and healthy controls. NEW & NOTEWORTHY In chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), single-limb knee extension and shoulder flexion resulted in a lower peak cardiorespiratory response as well as larger localized exercise workloads compared with two-limb exercises. Cardiorespiratory and quadriceps deoxygenation cost per kilogram work was greater in COPD compared with healthy controls, despite similar acute responses. Compared with knee extension, shoulder flexion imposed a similar burden on the cardiorespiratory system in patients with COPD and healthy controls.

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