AI Article Synopsis

  • There is growing interest in how interval (INT) training compares to continuous (CONT) training in enhancing mitochondrial content in skeletal muscles, especially considering factors like exercise intensity and individual differences.
  • A study involving 10 young adults used a single-leg cycling approach to investigate whether short-term INT training would lead to greater mitochondrial improvements than CONT training, while keeping total volume and intensity equal.
  • Results showed that CONT training significantly increased markers of mitochondrial content, whereas INT training did not, even though both training methods improved muscle performance.

Article Abstract

There is renewed interest in the potential for interval (INT) training to increase skeletal muscle mitochondrial content including whether the response differs from continuous (CONT) training. Comparisons of INT and CONT exercise are impacted by the manner in which protocols are "matched", particularly with respect to exercise intensity, as well as inter-individual differences in training responses. We employed single-leg cycling to facilitate a within-participant design and test the hypothesis that short-term INT training would elicit a greater increase in mitochondrial content than work- and intensity-matched CONT training. Ten young healthy adults (five males and five females) completed 12 training sessions over 4 weeks with each leg. Legs were randomly assigned to complete either 30 min of CONT exercise at a challenging sustainable workload (~50% single-leg peak power output; Wpeak) or INT exercise that involved 10 × 3-min bouts at the same absolute workload. INT bouts were interspersed with 1 min of recovery at 10% Wpeak and each CONT session ended with 10 min at 10% Wpeak. Absolute and mean intensity, total training time, and volume were thus matched between legs but the pattern of exercise differed. Contrary to our hypothesis, biomarkers of mitochondrial content including citrate synthase maximal activity, mitochondrial protein content and subsarcolemmal mitochondrial volume increased after CONT (p < 0.05) but not INT training. Both training modes increased single-leg Wpeak (p < 0.01) and time to exhaustion at 70% of single-leg Wpeak (p < 0.01). In a work- and intensity-matched comparison, short-term CONT training increased skeletal muscle mitochondrial content whereas INT training did not.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/sms.14332DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

mitochondrial content
12
skeletal muscle
8
muscle mitochondrial
8
training
8
absolute intensity
8
intensity total
8
int training
8
content including
8
cont training
8
cont exercise
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!