Abstract

Purpose: This study compared the immediate effects of smoking on cardiorespiratory responses to dynamic arm and leg exercises.Methods:This randomized crossover study recruited 14 college students. Each participant underwent two sets of arm-cranking (AC) and leg-cycling (LC) exercise tests. The testing sequences of the control trial (participants refrained from smoking for 8 h before testing) and the experimental trial (participants smoked two cigarettes immediately before testing) were randomly chosen. We observed immediate changes in pulmonary function and heart rate variability after smoking and before the exercise test. The participants then underwent graded exercise tests of their arms and legs until reaching exhaustion. We compared the peak work achieved and time to exhaustion during the exercise tests with various cardiorespiratory indices [i.e., heart rate, oxygen consumption (VO2), minute ventilation (VE)]. The differences between the smoking and control trials were calculated using paired t-tests. For the exercise test periods, VO2, heart rate, and VE values were calculated at every 10% increment of the maximal effort time. The main effects of the time and trial, as well as their trial-by-time (4 × 10) interaction effects on the outcome measures, were investigated using repeated measure ANOVA with trend analysis.Results: 5 min after smoking, the participants exhibited reduced forced vital capacities and forced expiratory volumes in the first second (P < 0.05), in addition to elevated resting heart rates (P < 0.001). The high-frequency, low-frequency, and the total power of the heart rate variability were also reduced (P < 0.05) at rest. For the exercise test periods, smoking reduced the time to exhaustion (P = 0.005) and the ventilatory threshold (P < 0.05) in the LC tests, whereas no significant effects were observed in the AC tests. A trend analysis revealed a significant trial-by-time interaction effect for heart rate, VO2, and VE during the graded exercise test (all P < 0.001). Lower VO2 and VE levels were exhibited in the exercise response of the smoking trial than in those of the control LC trials, whereas no discernable inter-trial difference was observed in the AC trials. Moreover, the differences in heart rate and VE response between the LC and AC exercises were significantly smaller after the participants smoked.Conclusion: This study verified that smoking significantly decreased performance and cardiorespiratory responses to leg exercises. However, the negative effects of smoking on arm exercise performance were not as pronounced.

Highlights

  • METHODSThe immediate detrimental effects of cigarette smoking on pulmonary and cardiovascular function, when these systems are stressed by the metabolic demands of exercise, have been thoroughly investigated

  • Pulmonary function was first tested to serve as a baseline value in the experimental session before the graded maximal exercise tests (GXTs)

  • The second pulmonary function test was performed 5 min after the participants finished smoking in order to detect any immediate changes

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Summary

Introduction

METHODSThe immediate detrimental effects of cigarette smoking on pulmonary and cardiovascular function, when these systems are stressed by the metabolic demands of exercise, have been thoroughly investigated. The inhalation of cigarette smoke exerts the immediate respiratory effect of increasing airway resistance (Sobol et al, 1977; Iyawe et al, 2007). Carbon monoxide levels in the blood increase after smoking (Seppänen, 1977; Hawari et al, 2013). Both of these changes reduce the amount of oxygen absorbed into the body. Several studies have shown that cigarette smoking significantly lowers exercise capacity, maximal oxygen consumption (VO2 max), and the anaerobic threshold. The immediate effects of cigarette smoking on arm-cranking (AC) exercise, for example, have not been reported

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