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Similar metabolic adaptations during exercise after low volume sprint interval and traditional endurance training in humans

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TLDR
Given the markedly lower training volume in the SIT group, these data suggest that high‐intensity interval training is a time‐efficient strategy to increase skeletal muscle oxidative capacity and induce specific metabolic adaptations during exercise that are comparable to traditional ET.
Abstract
Low-volume ‘sprint’ interval training (SIT) stimulates rapid improvements in muscle oxidative capacity that are comparable to levels reached following traditional endurance training (ET) but no study has examined metabolic adaptations during exercise after these different training strategies. We hypothesized that SIT and ET would induce similar adaptations in markers of skeletal muscle carbohydrate (CHO) and lipid metabolism and metabolic control during exercise despite large differences in training volume and time commitment. Active but untrained subjects (23 ± 1 years) performed a constant-load cycling challenge (1 h at 65% of peak oxygen uptake ( ˙ VO2peak) before and after 6 weeks of either SIT or ET (n = 5 men and 5 women per group). SIT consisted of four to six repeats of a 30 s ‘all out’ Wingate Test (mean power output ∼500 W) with 4.5 min recovery between repeats, 3 days per week. ET consisted of 40‐60 min of continuous cycling at a workload that elicited ∼65% ˙ VO2peak (mean power output ∼150 W) per day, 5 days per week. Weekly time commitment (∼1.5 versus ∼4.5 h) and total training volume (∼225 versus ∼2250 kJ week −1 ) were substantially lower in SIT versus ET. Despite these differences, both protocols induced similar increases (P < 0.05) in mitochondrial markers for skeletal muscle CHO (pyruvate dehydrogenase E1α protein content) and lipid oxidation (3-hydroxyacyl CoA dehydrogenase maximal activity) and protein content of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ coactivator-1α. Glycogen and phosphocreatine utilization during exercise were reduced after training, and calculated rates of whole-body CHO and lipid oxidation were decreased and increased, respectively, with no differences between groups (all main effects, P < 0.05). Given the markedly lower training volume in the SIT group, these data suggest that high-intensity interval training is a time-efficient strategy to increase skeletal muscle oxidative capacity and induce specific metabolic adaptations during exercise that are comparable to traditional ET.

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Time course and mechanisms of adaptations in cardiorespiratory fitness with endurance training in older and young men

TL;DR: With short-term training O and Y significantly increased their Vo(2 max); however, the proportion of Vo( 2 max) increase explained by Q(max) and maximal a-vO(2 diff) throughout training showed a different pattern by age group.
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Effects of a low-volume aerobic-type interval exercise on VO2max and cardiac mass.

TL;DR: The study revealed that V˙O2max improvement with theHIAT was greater than with the CAT despite the HIAT being performed with a far lower volume and in far less time than the CAT, suggesting that the HIIT has potential as a time-efficient training mode to improve V�’O 2max in sedentary adults.
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Intermittent and continuous high-intensity exercise training induce similar acute but different chronic muscle adaptations

TL;DR: A single session of exercise lasting <10 min, performed three times per week for 6 weeks, was sufficient to improve maximal aerobic capacity and the protein signalling responses to an acute bout of HIIT were generally not predictive of training‐induced outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of single bout of very high-intensity exercise on metabolic health biomarkers in overweight/obese sedentary men.

TL;DR: A single ES, which may represent a more time-efficient alternative to SIT, can increase insulin sensitivity and increase fat oxidation in overweight overweight/obese sedentary men.
Journal ArticleDOI

High-Intensity Interval Training: An Alternative for Older Adults

TL;DR: Although the length of the work interval may need to be adjusted to fit the needs and capacity of the participant, HIT should be considered as an alternative to TET for older adults with the expectation that it requires less time to execute, yet promotes peripheral and perhaps central adaptations.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A rapid and sensitive method for the quantitation of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye binding

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ACSM Position Stand: The Recommended Quantity and Quality of Exercise for Developing and Maintaining Cardiorespiratory and Muscular Fitness, and Flexibility in Healthy Adults

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Journal ArticleDOI

Short‐term sprint interval versus traditional endurance training: similar initial adaptations in human skeletal muscle and exercise performance

TL;DR: Data demonstrate that SIT is a time‐efficient strategy to induce rapid adaptations in skeletal muscle and exercise performance that are comparable to ET in young active men.
Journal Article

Table of nonprotein respiratory quotient: an update.

TL;DR: The purpose of this paper is to point out some limits and inconsistencies in the table of nonprotein respiratory quotient that is universally used, developed by Lusk in 1924, which was derived from biochemical and physical data that are now outdated.
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