AI Article Synopsis

  • The study observed the cardiorespiratory and metabolic responses of elite wheelchair racing athletes during a 25 km time trial.
  • Seven elite wheelchair athletes completed tests in a lab and a field course in Urbana, Illinois, measuring various physical metrics like heart rate, oxygen consumption, energy expenditure, blood lactate, and glucose.
  • The results indicated that athletes maintained high intensity levels, but the findings suggest their exercise responses are generally lower than those of able-bodied elite athletes, providing valuable data for their training and race strategies.

Article Abstract

Study Design: Observational study.

Objectives: To characterize the cardiorespiratory and metabolic response of elite wheelchair racing (WCR) athletes during a 25 km, field-based time trial.

Settings: University laboratory and field racing course in Urbana, Illinois, USA.

Methods: Seven elite WCR athletes (4 men/3 women) with spinal cord injury completed an incremental exercise test to exhaustion on a computerized wheelchair roller system to determine peak cardiorespiratory capacity in the laboratory. The athletes then completed a long-distance, field-based time trial (i.e., 25 km) within 5 days. Energy expenditure was measured continuously during the time trial with a portable metabolic unit. Blood samples were collected to determine blood lactate and glucose concentrations. Core temperature was measured using an ingestible sensor thermistor.

Results: Five participants completed the long-distance time trial with usable cardiorespiratory data. Median heart rate and oxygen consumption during the time trial was 93.6% and 76.6% of peak values, respectively. Median energy expenditure was 504.6 kcal/h. There was a significant increase in blood lactate concentration from 0.7 to 4.0 mmol/L after the time trial ( = 0.03). There were no changes in blood glucose concentrations after the time trial ( = 0.27). Lastly, core temperature significantly increased from 37.1 at baseline to 38.7 °C immediately after the time trial ( = 0.01).

Conclusions: Elite WCR athletes sustained a high exercise intensity that was consistent across the long-distance time trial, and exercise intensity outcomes were generally lower than those documented for elite able-bodied long-distance athletes in other studies. Our findings provide accurate estimates of energy expenditure that can be used to design effective training and racing strategies for elite WCR athletes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6092408PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41394-018-0114-3DOI Listing

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