Exercise responses to repeated cycle sprints with continuous and intermittent hypoxic exposure.

Eur J Sport Sci

School of Human Sciences (Exercise and Sports Science), The University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study analyzes how manipulating oxygen levels during different phases of repeated sprint cycling affects performance and physiological responses in trained males.
  • Twelve participants performed multiple cycling sprints under different conditions: continuous hypoxia (C-HYP), intermittent hypoxia during sprints (I-HYP), intermittent hypoxia during recovery, and normal conditions (C-NOR).
  • Results showed that both peak and mean power output were lower in the continuous hypoxia condition compared to normal conditions and intermittent hypoxia, while oxygen saturation levels also dropped significantly during hypoxic conditions.
  • Despite differences in power output and perceived breathing difficulty, other internal responses like heart rate and blood lactate levels remained similar across all conditions.

Article Abstract

We examine the impact of the acute manipulation of oxygen availability during discrete phases (active and passive) of a repeated-sprint cycling protocol on performance, physiological, and perceptual responses. On separate days, twelve trained males completed four sets of five 5-s 'all out' cycle sprints (25-s inter-sprint recovery and 5-min interset rest) in four randomized conditions: normobaric hypoxia (inspired oxygen fraction of 12.9%) applied continuously (C-HYP), intermittently during only the sets of sprints (I-HYP) or between-sets recovery periods (I-HYP), or not at all (C-NOR). Peak and mean power output, peripheral oxygen saturation, heart rate, blood lactate concentration, exercise-related sensations, and vastus lateralis muscle oxygenation using near-infrared spectroscopy were assessed. Peak and mean power output was ∼4%-5% lower for C-HYP compared to C-NOR (P ≤ 0.050) and I-HYP (P ≤ 0.027). Peripheral oxygen saturation was lower during C-HYP and I-HYP compared with C-NOR and I-HYP during sets of sprints (∼83-85 vs. ∼95%-97%; P < 0.001), while lower values were obtained for C-HYP and I-HYP than C-NOR and I-HYP during between-sets rest period (∼84-85 vs. ∼96%; P < 0.001). Difficulty in breathing was ∼21% higher for C-HYP than C-NOR (P = 0.050). Ratings of perceived exertion (P = 0.435), limb discomfort (P = 0.416), heart rate (P = 0.605), blood lactate concentration (P = 0.976), and muscle oxygenation-derived variables (P = 0.056 to 0.605) did not differ between conditions. In conclusion, the method of hypoxic exposure application (continuous vs. intermittent) affects mechanical performance, while internal demands remained essentially comparable during repeated cycle sprints.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11295084PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ejsc.12146DOI Listing

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