AI Article Synopsis

  • Exercise intensity is essential for improving athletic performance, but there's confusion about the best heart rate training zones for maximizing results, as shown by varied findings in research.
  • A study involving 13 collegiate triathletes monitored their heart rates during running and cycling for eight weeks to see how their training intensity affected their aerobic performance.
  • Results indicated that those who spent more time training within specific metabolic thresholds experienced significant improvements in their VO2 threshold compared to those with less training in that zone, suggesting optimizing training intensity could benefit performance.

Article Abstract

Exercise intensity is a critical component of the exercise prescription model. However, current research employing various non-specific exercise intensity protocols have reported wide variability in maximum oxygen uptake (VO) improvement after training, suggesting a present lack of consensus regarding optimal heart rate (f) training zones for maximal athletic performance. This study examined the relationship between percentage of time (%time) spent training between the metabolic (VOθ) and ventilatory thresholds (Vθ), and the resultant change in markers of aerobic performance. Thirteen (6 males) collegiate club-level triathletes were recruited for eight weeks of remote f monitoring during all running and cycling sessions. Participants donned a forearm-worn optical f sensor paired to a smartphone that collected and stored fs. Subjects were categorized into Low and High groups based on %time spent training between the VOθ and Vθ. Significant increases were observed in relative VO ( = 0.007, g = 0.48), VOθ ( = 0.018, g = 0.35), and Vθ ( = 0.030, g = 0.29) from baseline after eight weeks for both groups. A 95% bootstrapped confidence interval that did not include zero (-0.38, -0.03; g = 1.26) revealed a large and significantly greater change in VOθ in the High group (0.37 ± 0.15 L/min) versus the Low group (0.17 ± 0.14 L/min). No significant differences were observed in other variables between groups. Increasing triathletes' %time spent exercising between VOθ and Vθ may optimize increases in VOθ after eight weeks of training.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6355121PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.70252/HNHZ4958DOI Listing

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