Litcius/Paper detail

Cerebral lactate uptake during exercise is driven by the increased arterial lactate concentration

Christoph Siebenmann, Henrik Sørensen, Thomas Christian Bonne, Morten Zaar, Niels Jacob Aachmann‐Andersen, Nikolai Baastrup Nordsborg, Henning B. Nielsen, Niels H. Secher, Carsten Lundby, Peter Rasmussen

2021Journal of Applied Physiology14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

During exercise the brain consumes lactate as a substitute for glucose. Propranolol has previously attenuated this cerebral lactate uptake, suggesting a β-adrenergic transport mechanism. However, in the present study, we demonstrate that the fractional extraction of arterial lactate by the brain is unaffected by propranolol throughout incremental exercise to exhaustion. We conclude that cerebral lactate uptake during exercise is passively driven by the increasing arterial concentration, rather than by a β-adrenergic mechanism within the brain.

Topics & Concepts

PropranololInternal medicineBlood lactateAdrenergicEndocrinologyChemistryMedicineAnesthesiaBlood pressureHeart rateReceptorTraumatic Brain Injury and Neurovascular DisturbancesNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology ResearchHeart Rate Variability and Autonomic Control