Abstract

The purpose of this study was to determine the electrolyte concentration changes in arterial plasma from high-intensity repeated bouts of cycling exercise in well-trained females and to determine the relationships between arterial plasma lactate, potassium (K+), bicarbonate (HCO3(-)), and pH with minute ventilation. Fourteen female subjects (mean age = 27 +/- 4 years; mean height = 170 +/- 7 cm; mean weight = 62 +/- 7 kg; maximal oxygen uptake = 50 +/- 6 ml/kg/min) were recruited to perform 3 x 5 min bouts of exercise at 236 +/- 27 W with 10 min recovery between each set. Minute ventilation, arterial plasma lactate, potassium, calcium, chloride, and sodium ion concentrations were measured a minute 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 of each set and midway through recovery (21 sampling points total per subject). The results showed that the strongest relationship was between arterial plasma K+ concentration and minute ventilation (r2 = 0.91), and, that arterial plasma lactate mirrored both arterial plasma HCO3(-) and pH. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that women exhibit similar electrolyte responses as reported elsewhere in men, and support the idea that K+ may partly contribute to controlling ventilation during high-intensity exercise and recovery.

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