Publications by authors named "Eduardo Marcel Fernandes Nascimento"

Article Synopsis
  • * Fifteen cyclists performed four testing sessions with two cycling bouts each, using either caffeinated gum or placebo in a double-blind setup, but showed no significant difference in performance between the two types of gum after exercise.
  • * Results indicated that caffeinated gum did not effectively reduce muscle force decline, and moderate correlations suggested caution in linking isometric force measurements directly to fatigue in dynamic activities.
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This study aimed to investigate the effects of caffeine ingestion by chewing gum (GUMCAF) combined with priming exercise on pulmonary oxygen uptake (V˙O2) and near-infrared spectroscopy-derived muscle oxygen extraction (HHb + Mb) kinetics during cycling performed in a severe-intensity domain. Fifteen trained cyclists completed four visits: two under a placebo gum (GUMPLA) and two under GUMCAF ingestion. Each visit consisted of two square-wave cycling bouts at Δ70 intensity (70% of difference between the V˙O2 at first ventilatory threshold and V˙O2max) with duration of 6 min each and 5 min of passive rest between the bouts.

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Article Synopsis
  • - This study compared cycling performance using two sprint modes: isolinear (ISO) and isovelocity (ISO), with 20 trained male cyclists completing multiple short sprints on a specialized ergometer.
  • - Results showed that while torque (T) was significantly greater in the ISO mode, maximum cadence (C) was higher in the other ISO mode, with both modes yielding similar power outputs (P) and optimal cadence power (OPT).
  • - The findings suggest that a single test in ISO mode is effective for assessing muscle fatigue during cycling, demonstrating good consistency and acceptable variability in results.
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New Findings: What is the central question of this study? What are the physiological mechanisms underlying muscle fatigue and the increase in the O cost per unit of work during high-intensity exercise? What is the main finding and its importance? Muscle fatigue happens before, and does not explain, the slow component ( ), but they share the same origin. Muscle activation heterogeneity is associated with muscle fatigue and . Knowing this may improve training prescriptions for healthy people leading to improved public health outcomes.

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The purpose of this study was to verify the heart rate variability (HRV) and heart rate (HR) kinetics during the fundamental phase in different intensity domains of cycling exercise. Fourteen males performed five exercise sessions: (1) maximal incremental cycling test; (2) two rest-to-exercise transitions for each intensity domain, that is, heavy (Δ30) and severe (Δ60) domains. HRV markers (SD1 and SD2) and HR kinetics in the fundamental phase were analyzed by first-order exponential fitting.

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This study aimed to determine the critical speed (CS) and the work above CS (D') from three mathematical models of para-athletes during a treadmill handcycling exercise. Nine hand-cyclists with spinal cord injuries performed a maximal incremental handcycling test and three tests to exhaustion at a constant speed to determine the speed-time relationship. The three tests to exhaustion were performed at intensities between 90% and 105% of peak speed derived from the incremental test.

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Introduction: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the application of the Dmax method on heart rate variability (HRV) to estimate the lactate thresholds (LT), during a maximal incremental running test (MIRT).

Methods: Nineteen male runners performed two MIRTs, with the initial speed at 8 km·h and increments of 1 km·h every 3 minutes, until exhaustion. Measures of HRV and blood lactate concentrations were obtained, and lactate (LT and LT) and HRV (HRVT and HRVT) thresholds were identified.

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