Physiological responses to repeated bouts of high-intensity ultraendurance cycling - a field study case report


Autoria(s): Laursen, P. B.; Ahern, S. M.; Herzig, P. J.; Shing, C. M.; Jenkins, D. G.
Contribuinte(s)

B. Abernethy

Data(s)

01/06/2003

Resumo

The present study aimed to 1) examine the relationship between laboratory-based measures and high-intensity ultraendurance (HIU) performance during an intermittent 24-h relay ultraendurance mountain bike race (similar to20 min cycling, similar to60min recovery), and 2) examine physiological and performance based changes throughout the HIU event. Prior to the HIU event, four highly-trained male cyclists (age = 24.0 +/- 2.1 yr; mass = 75.0 +/- 2.7 kg; (V)over dot O-2peak = 70 +/- 3 ml.kg(-1).min(-1)) performed 1) a progressive exercise test to determine peak Volume of oxygen uptake ((V)over dot O-2peak), peak power output (PPO), and ventilatory threshold (T-vent), 2) time-to-fatigue tests at 100% (TF100) and 150% of PPO (TF150), and 3) a laboratory simulated 40-km time trial (TT40). Blood lactate (Lac(-)), haematocrit and haemoglobin were measured at 6-h intervals throughout the HIU event, while heart rate (HR) was recorded continuously. Intermittent HIU performance, performance HR, recovery HR, and Lac declined (P < 0.05), while plasma volume expanded (P < 0.05) during the HIU event. TF100 was related to the decline in lap time (r = -0.96; P < 0.05), and a trend (P = 0.081) was found between TF150 and average intermittent HIU speed (r = 0.92). However, other measures (V)over dot O-2peak, PPO, T-vent, and TT40) were not related to HIU performance. Measures of high-intensity endurance performance (TF100, TF150) were better predictors of intermittent HIU performance than traditional laboratory-based measures of aerobic capacity.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:65607

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Sports Medicine Australia

Palavras-Chave #Sport Sciences #Long-distance Runners #Peak Power Output #Trained Cyclists #Prolonged Exercise #Heart-rate #Endurance Performance #Intermittent Exercise #Ironman Triathlon #Early Adaptations #Cardiac-function #C1 #321401 Exercise Physiology #750203 Organised sports
Tipo

Journal Article