Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/216628
Title: Monitoring Changes in Oxygen Muscle during Exercise with High–Flow Nasal Cannula Using Wearables NIRS Biosensors
Author: Contreras–Briceño, Felipe
Espinosa–Ramírez, Maximiliano
Rivera–Greene, Augusta
Guerra–Venegas, Camila
Lungenstrass–Poulsen, Antonia
Villagra–Reyes, Victoria
Caulier-Cisterna, Raúl
Araneda, Oscar F.
Viscor Carrasco, Ginés
Keywords: Exercici
Rehabilitació
Espectroscòpia infraroja
Exercise
Rehabilitation
Infrared spectroscopy
Issue Date: 13-Nov-2023
Publisher: MDPI
Abstract: Exercise increases the cost of breathing (COB) due to increased lung ventilation (V̇E), inducing respiratory muscles deoxygenation (∇SmO2) , while the increase in workload implies ∇SmO2 in locomotor muscles. This phenomenon has been proposed as a leading cause of exercise intolerance, especially in clinical contexts. The use of High–Flow Nasal Cannula (HFNC) during exercise routines in rehabilitation programs has gained significant interest because it is proposed as a therapeutic intervention for reducing symptoms associated with exercise intolerance, such as fatigue and dyspnoea, assuming that HFNC could reduce exercise-induced ∇SmO2. SmO2 can be detected using optical wearable devices provided by Near–Infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS) technology, which measures the changes in the amount of oxygen–bound to chromophores (e.g., hemoglobin, myoglobin, cytochrome oxidase) at the target tissue level. We tested in a study with a cross–over design whether the muscular desaturation of m.vastus lateralis and m.intercostales during a high-intensity constant-load exercise can be reduced when it was supported with HFNC in non-physically active adults. Eighteen participants (9 women; age: 22±2 years, weight: 65.1±11.2 kg, height: 173.0±5.8 cm, BMI: 21.6±2.8 kg·m–²) were evaluated in a cycle ergometer (15 min, 70% maximum watts achieved in ergospirometry (V̇O2-peak)) breathing spontaneously (Control, CTRL) or with HFNC support 32(HFNC; 50 L·min–1, fiO2: 21%, 30°C), separated by seven days in randomized order. Two–way ANOVA tests analyzed the ∇SmO2 (m.intercostales and m.vastus lateralis), and changes in V̇E and ∇SmO2·V̇E–1. Dyspnoea, leg fatigue, and effort level (RPE) were compared between trials by the Wilcoxon matched–paired signed rank test. We found that the interaction of factors (trial × exercise–time) was significant to ∇SmO2–m.intercostales, V̇E, and (∇SmO2–m.intercostales)/V̇E (p<0.05, all), but not in ∇SmO2–m.vastus lateralis. ∇SmO2–m.intercostales was more pronounced in CTRL during exercise since 5` (p<0.05). Hyperventilation was higher in CTRL since 10` (p<0.05). The ∇SmO2·V̇E–1 decreased during exercise, being lowest in CTRL since 5`. Lower dyspnoea was reported in HFNC, with no differences in leg fatigue and RPE. We concluded that wearable optical biosensors documented the beneficial effect of HFNC in COB due to lower respiratory ∇SmO2 induced by exercise. We suggest incorporating NIRS devices in rehabilitation programs to monitor physiological changes that can support the clinical impact of the therapeutic intervention implemented.
Note: Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.3390/bios13110985
It is part of: Biosensors-Basel, 2023, vol. 13, num.11, p. 1-17
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/216628
Related resource: https://doi.org/10.3390/bios13110985
ISSN: 2079-6374
Appears in Collections:Articles publicats en revistes (Biologia Cel·lular, Fisiologia i Immunologia)

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