The Physiology of Exercise in Spinal Cord Injury 2016
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4939-6664-6_4
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Respiratory System Responses to Exercise in Spinal Cord Injury

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Cited by 2 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…The current study controls for completeness by only including motor complete injuries and controls for LOI by only including individuals of the same functional level, C7-T5, a level that is higher than what is needed to approach pulmonary function in the able bodied individual (T6-8). 57 The current study showed a 13% and 19% increase in resting VO 2 and relative VO 2peak , respectively, demonstrating the subjects increased ability to uptake, transport, and utilized oxygen after 10 weeks of training at 70% VO 2peak . It currently remains unclear whether the improvements in aerobic fitness stem from (1) physiological adaptions in heart rate, stroke volume, and/or cardiac output, (2) improvements in a-VO 2 differences (oxygen extraction in the peripheral tissues), or (3) neurological adaptions in the brain and/or cord.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 56%
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“…The current study controls for completeness by only including motor complete injuries and controls for LOI by only including individuals of the same functional level, C7-T5, a level that is higher than what is needed to approach pulmonary function in the able bodied individual (T6-8). 57 The current study showed a 13% and 19% increase in resting VO 2 and relative VO 2peak , respectively, demonstrating the subjects increased ability to uptake, transport, and utilized oxygen after 10 weeks of training at 70% VO 2peak . It currently remains unclear whether the improvements in aerobic fitness stem from (1) physiological adaptions in heart rate, stroke volume, and/or cardiac output, (2) improvements in a-VO 2 differences (oxygen extraction in the peripheral tissues), or (3) neurological adaptions in the brain and/or cord.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 56%
“…More cranial injuries display worse functional outcomes in numerous pulmonary measures. [57][58][59] This level dependent impairment is due to obstructive and restrictive lung disease caused by denervation of the pulmonary musculature, denervation of stabilizing abdominal musculature, and sympathetic blunting. 60 Motor-incomplete individuals (ISNCSCI C or D) have some pulmonary and skeletal muscle function below the LOI, while those individuals with a motor-complete injury (ISNCSCI A or B) do not.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the respiratory system, inspiratory muscle strength is relatively well preserved after low‐level C‐SCI because the primary muscle of inspiration, the diaphragm, receives neural input from the C3–C5 spinal nerves which remain intact (West et al., 2016). Conversely, expiratory muscle strength is severely compromised as the primary muscle of active expiration, the rectus abdominus, receives input from the T7–T11 spinal nerves.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%