APA
Muñoz, Ana & Riber, Cristina & Satué, Katiuska & Gómez Lucas, Raquel & Benito, Milagros .Relationship between Systemic Adaptation to Physical Effort and Plasma Potassium in Untrained and Trained Andalusian and Angloarabian Horses.
ISO 690
Muñoz, Ana & Riber, Cristina & Satué, Katiuska & Gómez Lucas, Raquel & Benito, Milagros. Relationship between Systemic Adaptation to Physical Effort and Plasma Potassium in Untrained and Trained Andalusian and Angloarabian Horses.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/44877
Abstract:
Plasma K accumulation during exercise results from the balance between exchange through
biological membranes (mainly muscle fibres and erythrocytes), distribution to other tissues
and the haemoconcentration. In the present study, the effect of exercise and training on
plasma K concentrations and its relationships with other physiological variables have been
analysed in two equine breeds. Twenty male Andalusian (AN) and ten Angloarabian (AA)
horses, 7 females and 3 males, were subjected to two standardised exercise tests, composed
of four workloads, before and after training. Heart rate (HR) was monitored and venous
blood was withdrawn at rest, before each exercise level and during recovery. The following
parameters were analysed: packed cell volume (PCV), plasma K, lactate (LA) and total
protein (TPP). Furthermore, the horses were filmed and three kinematic parameters were
studied: stride duration (SD), frequency (SF) and length (SL). Exercise induced an increase
in K from 6 and 8 m/sec in AA and AN horses respectively, a steady-state until the end of the
exercise and a decrease after 2 min of recuperation. Some interbreed differences existed,
with higher K levels in the AN horses, due to the higher relative exercise intensity, stride
frequency and haemoconcentration. K was correlated with HR, PCV, TPP, SL, SD and SF.
Training caused a decrease in K in AN, but not in AA horses. Plasma K seems to be a good
indicator of the physical effort intensity, fitness and training degrees, but it was not related to
the magnitude of the glycolytic response to exercise.
Key words: exercise, horses, lactate, potassium, training