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Autonomic Function Predicts Fitness Response to Short-Term High-Intensity Interval Training




TekijätKiviniemi AM, Tulppo MP, Eskelinen JJ, Savolainen AM, Kapanen J, Heinonen IHA, Hautala AJ, Hannukainen JC, Kalliokoski KK

KustantajaGEORG THIEME VERLAG KG

Julkaisuvuosi2015

JournalInternational Journal of Sports Medicine

Tietokannassa oleva lehden nimiINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SPORTS MEDICINE

Lehden akronyymiINT J SPORTS MED

Vuosikerta36

Numero11

Aloitussivu915

Lopetussivu921

Sivujen määrä7

ISSN0172-4622

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1055/s-0035-1549854


Tiivistelmä

We tested the hypothesis that baseline cardiac autonomic function and its acute response to all-out interval exercise explains individual fitness responses to high-intensity interval training (HIT). Healthy middle-aged sedentary men performed HIT (n=12, 4-6x30s of all-out cycling efforts with 4-min recovery) or aerobic training (AET, n=9, 40-60min at 60% of peak workload in exercise test [Load(peak)]), comprising 6 sessions within 2 weeks. Low (LF) and high frequency (HF) power of R-R interval oscillation were analyzed from data recorded at supine and standing position (5+5min) every morning during the intervention. A significant training effect (p<0.001), without a training*group interaction, was observed in Load(peak) and peak oxygen consumption (VO2peak). Pre-training supine LF/HF ratio, an estimate of sympathovagal balance, correlated with training outcome in Load(peak) (Spearman's rho [r(s)]=-0.74, p=0.006) and VO2peak (r(s)=-0.59, p=0.042) in the HIT but not the AET group. Also, the mean change in the standing LF/HF ratio in the morning after an acute HIT exercise during the 1(st) week of intervention correlated with training response in Load(peak) (r(s)=-0.68, p=0.014) and VO2peak (r(s)=-0.60, p=0.039) with HIT but not with AET. In conclusion, pre-training cardiac sympathovagal balance and its initial alterations in response to acute HIT exercise were related to fitness responses to short-term HIT.




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