원문정보
초록
영어
The aim of the present study was to devise a non-damaging high-inten-sity intermittent running protocol. Ten healthy active men completed high-intensity interval running (8×3-min bouts at 90% of maximal oxy-gen uptake interspersed with 3-min recovery) on a motorized treadmill under normal laboratory temperatures. Mean heart rate and rating of perceived exertion significantly increased during the intermittent proto-col (the first bout, 15.3±1.2; the final bout, 18.6±0.9; P<0.001). Blood lactate concentrations were significantly elevated following bout 1 compared with resting values (1.2±0.3 mmol/L vs 5.4±2.4 mmol/L; P=0.03). However, no significant reduction in maximal voluntary con-traction was observed immediately after completing the last exercise bout (623.9±143.6 N) or during the subsequent 7-d period compared to pre-exercise values (P=0.59). Creatine kinase (CK) concentrations were not significantly increased following exercise or during the subse-quent 7-d period (P=0.96). Myoglobin (Mb) content was significantly in-creased following exercise (P=0.01), however, values returned towards pre-exercise concentrations after 24 h. These results indicate that the high-intensity intermittent running protocol induced changes in physio-logical and subjective indices that are consistent with the effects of acute fatigue as opposed to those changes normally associated with exercise-induced muscle damage. This exercise protocol can therefore be used to investigate the influence of high-intensity exercise from physiological responses to molecular adaptation.
목차
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Subjects
Familiarization
Procedures
Exercise protocols
Maximal isometric quadriceps force
Subjective estimation of muscle soreness
Statistical analysis
RESULTS
Physiological responses to intermittent exercise
Indices of muscle damage
DISCUSSION
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
REFERENCES
