Muscular exercise imposes the most potent sustained stress to cellular energetics. At work rates below the anaerobic threshold (i.e. no sustained lactic acidosis), the ventilatory and cardiovascular responses regulate arterial , [H+] and at or close to their resting levels in the steady state. However, dynamic forcing and systems-analytic techniques reveal two phases of the non-steady-state response dynamics. In the first phase, increased gas flow to the lungs results solely from increased pulmonary blood flow , with alveolar gas tensions being maintained at their resting levels by a coupled increase in ventilation : evidence for cardiopulmonary coupling being provided by experimentally-altered in man and dog. Arterial chemoreception does not impose humoral feedback control in this phase. Rather, rapid feedforward mechanisms operate, with both intrathoracic (largely cardiac) and exercising-limb mechanoreception proposed as afferent sources. In the second phase, cardiogenic gas flow to the lungs is augmented by altered mixed venous blood gas contents ; ventilation responding exponentially with a time constant (τ) which is an inverse function of carotid body gain. The close dynamic coupling of with CO2 output in this phase results in arterial and [H+] being maintained close to their resting levels. However, the kinetic dissociation between and O2 uptake, with , leads to an appreciable transient fall of arterial . The respiratory compensation for the sustained lactic acidosis at higher work rates is predominantly mediated by the carotid bodies in man: the aortic bodies subserving no discernible role. Control of the respiratory and circulatory responses to exercise is therefore mediated by both neural and humoral mechanisms : and an important control link appears to couple the responses, via feedforward ventilatory control of cardiac origin.

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This equation is obtained by substitution for from equation (2) into equation (3).

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