The ergogenic effect of recombinant human erythropoietin on VO2max depends on the severity of arterial hypoxemia.

The ergogenic effect of recombinant human erythropoietin on VO2max depends on the severity of arterial hypoxemia / Paul Robach, Jose A.L. Calbet, Jonas J. Thomsen, Robert Boushel, Pascal Mollard, Peter Rasmussen, Carsten Lundby. - (PLoS One 3 (2008) 8 (20 August); e2996)

    • PMID: 18714372
    • PMCID: PMC2500186
    • DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0002996


    Abstract

    Treatment with recombinant human erythropoietin (rhEpo) induces a rise in blood oxygen-carrying capacity (CaO(2)) that unequivocally enhances maximal oxygen uptake (VO(2)max) during exercise in normoxia, but not when exercise is carried out in severe acute hypoxia. This implies that there should be a threshold altitude at which VO(2)max is less dependent on CaO(2). To ascertain which are the mechanisms explaining the interactions between hypoxia, CaO(2) and VO(2)max we measured systemic and leg O(2) transport and utilization during incremental exercise to exhaustion in normoxia and with different degrees of acute hypoxia in eight rhEpo-treated subjects. Following prolonged rhEpo treatment, the gain in systemic VO(2)max observed in normoxia (6-7%) persisted during mild hypoxia (8% at inspired O(2) fraction (F(I)O(2)) of 0.173) and was even larger during moderate hypoxia (14-17% at F(I)O(2) = 0.153-0.134). When hypoxia was further augmented to F(I)O(2) = 0.115, there was no rhEpo-induced enhancement of systemic VO(2)max or peak leg VO(2). The mechanism highlighted by our data is that besides its strong influence on CaO(2), rhEpo was found to enhance leg VO(2)max in normoxia through a preferential redistribution of cardiac output toward the exercising legs, whereas this advantageous effect disappeared during severe hypoxia, leaving augmented CaO(2) alone insufficient for improving peak leg O(2) delivery and VO(2). Finally, that VO(2)max was largely dependent on CaO(2) during moderate hypoxia but became abruptly CaO(2)-independent by slightly increasing the severity of hypoxia could be an indirect evidence of the appearance of central fatigue.

    Original document

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    Science
    Research / Study
    Date
    20 August 2008
    People
    Boushel, Robert
    Calbet, Jose A.L.
    Lundby, Carsten
    Mollard, Pascal
    Rasmussen, Peter
    Robach, Paul
    Thomsen, Jonas J.
    Country
    France
    Language
    English
    Other organisations
    Ecole Nationale de Ski et d'Alpinisme (ENSA) - National School of Mountain Sports
    Doping classes
    S2. Peptide Hormones, Growth Factors
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    Erythropoietin (EPO)
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    Health effects
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    Scientific article
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    Date generated
    28 February 2012
    Date of last modification
    18 January 2022
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