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Modeling static and dynamic human cardiovascular responses to exercise

✍ Scribed by R.W. Stremel; E.M. Bernauer; L.W. Harter; R.A. Schultz; R.F. Walters


Book ID
103051442
Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1975
Weight
421 KB
Volume
4
Category
Article
ISSN
0010-468X

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✦ Synopsis


A human performance model has been developed and described which portrays the human circulatory, thermo regulatory and energy-exchange systems as an intercoupled set. In this model, steady state or static relationships are used to describe oxygen consumption and blood flow. For example, heart rate (HTRT) is calculated as a function of the oxygen and the thermo-regulatory requirements of each body compartment, using the steady state work values of cardiac output (CO, sum of all compartment blood flows) and stroke volume (SV, assumed maximal after 40% maximal oxygen consumption): HTRT = CO/SV.

The steady state model has proven to be an acceptable first approximation, but the inclusion of transient characteristics are essential in describing the overall systems' adjustment to exercise stress.

In the present study, the dynamic transient characteristics of heart rate, stroke volume and cardiac output were obtained from experiments utilizing step and sinusoidal forcing of work. The gain and phase relationships reveal a probable first order system with a six minute time constant, and are utilized to model the transient characteristics of these parameters. This approach leads to a more complex model but a more accurate representation of the physiology involved. The instrumentation and programming essential to these experiments are described.


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