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Blood Volume: Importance and Adaptations to Exercise Training, Environmental Stresses and Trauma/SicknessThis paper reviews the influence of several perturbations (physical exercise, heat stress, terrestrial altitude, microgravity, and trauma/sickness) on adaptations of blood volume (BV), erythrocyte volume (EV), and plasma volume (PV). Exercise training can induced BV expansion; PV expansion usually occurs immediately, but EV expansion takes weeks. EV and PV expansion contribute to aerobic power improvements associated with exercise training. Repeated heat exposure induces PV expansion but does not alter EV. PV expansion does not improve thermoregulation, but EV expansion improves thermoregulation during exercise in the heat. Dehydration decreases PV (and increases plasma tonicity) which elevates heat strain and reduces exercise performance. High altitude exposure causes rapid (hours) plasma loss. During initial weeks at altitude, EV is unaffected, but a gradual expansion occurs with extended acclimatization. BV adjustments contribute, but are not key, to altitude acclimatization. Microgravity decreases PV and EV which contribute to orthostatic intolerance and decreased exercise capacity in astronauts. PV decreases may result from lower set points for total body water and central venous pressure, which EV decrease bay result form increased erythrocyte destruction. Trauma, renal disease, and chronic diseases cause anemia from hemorrhage and immune activation, which suppressions erythropoiesis. The re-establishment of EV is associated with healing, improved life quality, and exercise capabilities for these injured/sick persons.
Document ID
20010021153
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Sawka, Michael N.
(Army Research Inst. of Environmental Medicine Natick, MA United States)
Convertino, Victor A.
Eichner, E. Randy
Schnieder, Suzanne M.
Young, Andrew J.
Date Acquired
August 20, 2013
Publication Date
May 1, 2000
Publication Information
Publication: Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise
Publisher: American Coll. of Sports Medicine
ISSN: 0195-9131
Subject Category
Aerospace Medicine
Report/Patent Number
AD-A383449
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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