scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of Protocol on Determination of Velocity at V̇O2 max and on its Time to Exhaustion

TLDR
Examination of the influence of the stage duration and velocity incrementation on the velocity at VO2 max and, consequently, on the two times to exhaustion (tlim) associated with the two vVO2 max generated by the two protocols demonstrated that small changes in protocol have no significant impact on the value of v VO2max and in consequence on tlim.
Abstract
The velocity associated with the achievement of VO2 max during an incremental treadmill test (v VO2 max) has been reported to be an indicator of performance in middle distance running events. Previous study has shown the reproducibility of the time to exhaustion (time limit: tlim) at v VO2 max performed by well-trained males in the same condition at one week of interval (Billat et al., 1994b). It is essential in studies involving tlim at v VO2 max that the v VO2 max be precisely determined, or else the measured tlim will be meaningless. The purpose of this study was to examine the influence of the stage duration and velocity incrementation on the velocity at VO2 max and, consequently, on the two times to exhaustion (tlim) associated with the two v VO2 max generated by the two protocols. v VO2 max was determined in 15 trained male endurance athletes as the lowest speed at which VO2 max was attained in speed-incremented 0%-slope treadmill tests. For one test, increments were 1.0 km.h-1 and stages were 2 min in duration; for the other test, increments were 0.5 km.h-1 and stages were 1 min in duration. Results of paired means t-tests revealed no difference in v VO2 max obtained using the two protocols. v VO2 max was 20.7 +/- 1.0 km.h-1 with the 1.0 km.h-1 x 2 min protocol and 20.8 +/- 0.9 km.h-1 with the 0.5 km.h-1 x 1 min protocol. In addition, VO2, VCO2, VE, VE/VO2 and respiratory exchange ratio at the submaximal intensities that were common to both protocols (e.g., 17.0 km.h-1, 18.0 km.h-1, 19.0 km.h-1, 20.0 km.h-1) did not differ. Times to exhaustion at the two v VO2 max demonstrated a high degree of inter-individual variability (coefficients of variation were 35% and 45%) but did not differ (345 +/- 120 s versus 373 +/- 169 s). These results demonstrated that small changes in protocol have no significant impact on the value of v VO2 max and in consequence on tlim v VO2 max.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Scientific Basis for High-Intensity Interval Training: Optimising Training Programmes and Maximising Performance in Highly Trained Endurance Athletes

TL;DR: It seems that, for athletes who are already trained, improvements in endurance performance can be achieved only through high-intensity interval training (HIT) and investigation into the optimal HIT programme for eliciting performance enhancements in highly trained athletes is required.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interval training at VO2max : effects on aerobic performance and overtraining markers

TL;DR: Performance and aerobic factors associated with the performance were not altered by the 4 wk of intensive training at vVO2max despite the increase of plasma noradrenaline.
Journal ArticleDOI

Significance of the Velocity at V̇O2max and Time to Exhaustion at this Velocity

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors pointed out that the rate of oxygen intake due to exercise increases as speed increases, reaching a maximum for the speeds beyond about 256 m/min, for which no further increases in O2 intake can occur, the heart, lungs, circulation, and diffusion of oxygen to the active muscle-fibres have attained their maximum activity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Methods to determine aerobic endurance

TL;DR: The present review examines methods available in the literature to assess aerobic endurance and concludes that there is no unique intensity corresponding to the AT, and the non-invasive determination of the AT using ventilatory and heart rate data instead of blood lactate concentration ([La- ]b) is not valid.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of 4-wk training using Vmax/Tmax on VO2max and performance in athletes.

TL;DR: The results of this study indicate that by utilizing between 60 and 75% of Tmax as an exercise duration and using Vmax as a exercise intensity that these two parameters can be extremely valuable in the prescription of exercise programs for athletes.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Optimizing the exercise protocol for cardiopulmonary assessment.

TL;DR: For evaluating cardiopulmonary function with incremental exercise testing by either treadmill or cycle, the VO2 max was significantly higher on tests where the increment magnitude was large enough to induce test durations of 8-17 min, but the AT was independent of test duration.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of stride length variation on oxygen uptake during distance running

TL;DR: The relatively efficient running patterns used by the subjects during unrestricted running indicate either an adaption to the chosen stride length through training or a successful process of energy optimization.

An indirect continuous running multistage field test: the Université de Montréal track test.

Luc Léger, +1 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that the UM-TT is valid and reliable to estimate the VO2max of trained and untrained young and middle-age males and females.
Related Papers (5)