期刊论文详细信息
Frontiers in Physiology
Physiological Adaptations to Hypoxic vs. Normoxic Training during Intermittent Living High
Peter Hespel1  Gommaar D'Hulst2  Paul van Herpt2  Ruud Van Thienen2  Marc Van Leemputte2  Stefan De Smet2 
[1] Athletic Performance Center, Bakala Academy, KU LeuvenLeuven, Belgium;Department of Kinesiology, Exercise Physiology Research Group, KU LeuvenLeuven, Belgium;
关键词: altitude training;    high-intensity interval training;    muscle hemodynamics;    pH regulation;    EPO;    hemoglobin mass;   
DOI  :  10.3389/fphys.2017.00347
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

In the setting of “living high,” it is unclear whether high-intensity interval training (HIIT) should be performed “low” or “high” to stimulate muscular and performance adaptations. Therefore, 10 physically active males participated in a 5-week “live high-train low or high” program (TR), whilst eight subjects were not engaged in any altitude or training intervention (CON). Five days per week (~15.5 h per day), TR was exposed to normobaric hypoxia simulating progressively increasing altitude of ~2,000–3,250 m. Three times per week, TR performed HIIT, administered as unilateral knee-extension training, with one leg in normobaric hypoxia (~4,300 m; TRHYP) and with the other leg in normoxia (TRNOR). “Living high” elicited a consistent elevation in serum erythropoietin concentrations which adequately predicted the increase in hemoglobin mass (r = 0.78, P < 0.05; TR: +2.6%, P < 0.05; CON: −0.7%, P > 0.05). Muscle oxygenation during training was lower in TRHYP vs. TRNOR (P < 0.05). Muscle homogenate buffering capacity and pH-regulating protein abundance were similar between pretest and posttest. Oscillations in muscle blood volume during repeated sprints, as estimated by oscillations in NIRS-derived tHb, increased from pretest to posttest in TRHYP (~80%, P < 0.01) but not in TRNOR (~50%, P = 0.08). Muscle capillarity (~15%) as well as repeated-sprint ability (~8%) and 3-min maximal performance (~10–15%) increased similarly in both legs (P < 0.05). Maximal isometric strength increased in TRHYP (~8%, P < 0.05) but not in TRNOR (~4%, P > 0.05). In conclusion, muscular and performance adaptations were largely similar following normoxic vs. hypoxic HIIT. However, hypoxic HIIT stimulated adaptations in isometric strength and muscle perfusion during intermittent sprinting.

【 授权许可】

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