Cardiorespiratory fitness declines with age and this decline can be accelerated by inactivity and bed rest. Recovery of fitness is possible, but the timeline in 55- to 65-yr-old adults is unknown. Furthermore, the effectiveness of exercise to prevent deconditioning during bed rest is unexplored in this age group. Twenty-two adults (11 women, 59 ± 3 yr) completed 2 wk of strict 6° head-down bed rest (HDBR). Half of the participants performed approximately 1 h of daily exercises, including high-intensity interval cycling, aerobic cycling, and upper- and lower-body resistance training, whereas control participants were inactive. Step-incremental cycling tests to exhaustion were conducted pre-HDBR and at three times during the recovery phase ( or , , and 4 wk) to assess peak oxygen uptake (V̇o). Peak V̇o was reduced in the control group throughout the first 6 days of recovery, but did return to pre-HDBR levels by the 4-wk recovery time point (interaction: = 0.002). In the exercise group, peak V̇o was not different at any time point during recovery from pre-HDBR. Ventilatory threshold V̇o (interaction: = 0.002) and heart rate at 15 W (interaction: = 0.055) mirrored the changes in peak V̇o in each respective group. Overall, this study showed that approximately 1 h of daily exercise effectively protected 55- to 65-yr-old adults' cardiorespiratory fitness during 2 wk of HDBR. HDBR without exercise countermeasures caused substantial reductions in cardiorespiratory fitness, but fitness recovered within 4 wk of resuming daily activities. These findings highlight the importance of physical activity in late middle-age adults. We report the complete time-course of cardiorespiratory fitness recovery back to baseline levels following 2 wk of head-down bed rest in 55- to 65-yr-old adults and found that multimodal training, consisting of high-intensity interval, aerobic and resistive exercises, performed throughout the 2 wk of head-down bed rest prevented reductions in cardiorespiratory fitness.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00726.2022DOI Listing

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