AI Article Synopsis

  • High-intensity training in a low-oxygen environment (normobaric hypoxia) significantly improved horses' aerobic capacity and exercise performance compared to training in normal oxygen conditions (normoxia).
  • After four weeks of training, horses in hypoxia showed greater increases in run time to exhaustion, maximal oxygen consumption, cardiac output, and stroke volume than those trained in normoxia.
  • The effectiveness of hypoxic training varied among individual horses, indicating that some horses may struggle with the stress of low oxygen during exercise, as shown by lack of significant improvements in poorly responding animals.

Article Abstract

We examined the effects of high-intensity training in normobaric hypoxia on aerobic capacity and exercise performance in horses and the individual response to normoxic and hypoxic training. Eight untrained horses were studied in a randomized, crossover design after training in hypoxia (HYP; 15.0% inspired O ) or normoxia (NOR; 20.9% inspired O ) 3 days/week for 4 weeks separated by a 4-month washout period. Before and after each training period, incremental treadmill exercise tests were performed in normoxia. Each training session consisted of 1 min cantering at 7 m/s and 2 min galloping at the speed determined to elicit maximal oxygen consumption ( O max) in normoxia. Hypoxia increased significantly more than NOR in run time to exhaustion (HYP, +28.4%; NOR, +10.4%, p = .001), O max (HYP, +12.1%; NOR, +2.6%, p = .042), cardiac output ( ; HYP, +11.3%; NOR, -1.7%, p = .019), and stroke volume (SV) at exhaustion (HYP, +5.4%; NOR, -5.5%, p = .035) after training. No significant correlations were observed between NOR and HYP for individual changes after training in run time (p = .21), O max (p = .99), (p = .19), and SV (p = .46) at exhaustion. Arterial O saturation during exercise in HYP was positively correlated with the changes in run time (r = .85, p = .0073), (r = .72, p = .043) and SV (r = .77, p = .026) of HYP after training, whereas there were no correlations between these parameters in NOR. These results suggest that high-intensity training in normobaric hypoxia improved exercise performance and aerobic capacity of horses to a greater extent than the same training protocol in normoxia, and the severity of hypoxemia during hypoxic exercise might be too stressful for poor responders to hypoxic training.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7243200PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.14814/phy2.14442DOI Listing

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