Moderate recovery unnecessary to sustain high stroke volume during interval training. A brief report

It has been suggested that the time spent at a high stroke volume (SV) is important for improving maximal cardiac function. The aim of this study was to examine the effect of recovery intensity on cardiovascular parameters during a typical high-intensity interval training (HIIT) session in fourteen well-trained cyclists. Oxygen consumption (VO2), heart rate (HR), SV, cardiac output (Qc), and oxygenation of vastus lateralis (TSI) were measured during a HIIT (3×3-min work period, 2 min of recovery) session on two occasions. VO2, HR and Qc were largely higher during moderate-intensity (60%) compared with low-intensity (30%) (VO2, effect size; ES = +2.6; HR, ES = +2.8; Qc, ES = +2.2) and passive (HR, ES = +2.2; Qc, ES = +1.7) recovery. By contrast, there was no clear difference in SV between the three recovery conditions, with the SV during the two active recovery periods not being substantially different than during exercise (60%, ES = -0.1; 30%, ES = -0.2). To conclude, moderate-intensity recovery may not be required to maintain a high SV during HIIT.
© Copyright 2014 Journal of Sports Science & Medicine. Department of Sports Medicine - Medical Faculty of Uludag University. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:training science biological and medical sciences
Tagging:HIT HIIT
Published in:Journal of Sports Science & Medicine
Language:English
Published: 2014
Online Access:http://www.jssm.org/abstresearchajssm-13-393.xml.xml
Volume:13
Issue:2
Pages:393-396
Document types:article
Level:advanced