Abstract

The ability to increase cardiac output during dynamic exercise is paramount for the ability to maintain workload performance. Reflex control of the cardiovascular system during exercise is complex and multifaceted involving multiple feedforward and feedback systems. One major reflex thought to mediate the autonomic adjustments to exercise is termed the muscle metaboreflex and is activated via afferent neurons within active skeletal muscle which respond to the accumulation of interstitial metabolites during exercise when blood flow and O2 delivery are insufficient to meet metabolic demands. This is one of the most powerful cardiovascular reflexes capable of eliciting profound increases in sympathetic nerve activity, arterial blood pressure, central blood volume mobilization, heart rate and cardiac output. This review summarizes the mechanisms meditating muscle metaboreflex-induced increases in cardiac output. Although much has been learned from studies using anaesthetized and/or decerebrate animals, we focus on studies in conscious animals and humans performing volitional exercise. We discuss the separate and interrelated roles of heart rate, ventricular contractility, ventricular preload and ventricular-vascular coupling as well as the interaction with other cardiovascular reflexes which modify muscle metaboreflex control of cardiac output. We discuss how these mechanisms may be altered in subjects with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction and offer suggestions for future studies.

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