The Physiological Mechanisms of Performance Enhancement with Sprint Interval Training Differ between the Upper and Lower Extremities in Humans.

Front Physiol

Swedish Winter Sports Research Centre, Mid Sweden UniversityÖstersund, Sweden; School of Kinesiology, University of British ColumbiaVancouver, BC, Canada; School of Sport Sciences, UiT Arctic University of NorwayTromsø, Norway.

Published: September 2016

To elucidate the mechanisms underlying the differences in adaptation of arm and leg muscles to sprint training, over a period of 11 days 16 untrained men performed six sessions of 4-6 × 30-s all-out sprints (SIT) with the legs and arms, separately, with a 1-h interval of recovery. Limb-specific VOpeak, sprint performance (two 30-s Wingate tests with 4-min recovery), muscle efficiency and time-trial performance (TT, 5-min all-out) were assessed and biopsies from the and taken before and after training. VOpeak and Wmax increased 3-11% after training, with a more pronounced change in the arms ( < 0.05). Gross efficiency improved for the arms (+8.8%, < 0.05), but not the legs (-0.6%). Wingate peak and mean power outputs improved similarly for the arms and legs, as did TT performance. After training, VO during the two Wingate tests was increased by 52 and 6% for the arms and legs, respectively ( < 0.001). In the case of the arms, VO was higher during the first than second Wingate test (64 vs. 44%, < 0.05). During the TT, relative exercise intensity, HR, VO, VCO, V, and V were all lower during arm-cranking than leg-pedaling, and oxidation of fat was minimal, remaining so after training. Despite the higher relative intensity, fat oxidation was 70% greater during leg-pedaling ( = 0.017). The aerobic energy contribution in the legs was larger than for the arms during the Wingate tests, although VO for the arms was enhanced more by training, reducing the O deficit after SIT. The levels of muscle glycogen, as well as the myosin heavy chain composition were unchanged in both cases, while the activities of 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA-dehydrogenase and citrate synthase were elevated only in the legs and capillarization enhanced in both limbs. Multiple regression analysis demonstrated that the variables that predict TT performance differ for the arms and legs. The primary mechanism of adaptation to SIT by both the arms and legs is enhancement of aerobic energy production. However, with their higher proportion of fast muscle fibers, the arms exhibit greater plasticity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5043010PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2016.00426DOI Listing

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