Reliability of time to exhaustion treadmill running as a measure of human endurance capacity

Little if any research has examined the variability in time to exhaustion (TTE) during submaximal treadmill running. This study investigated the test-retest reliability of submaximal treadmill TTE as a measure of endurance capacity. 16 endurance-trained males (n=14) and females (n=2) completed a run to exhaustion at 70% V?O2max (T1) and repeated the same run 3 weeks later (T2). At 30-min intervals during each run, expired gas, heart rate (HR) and ratings of perceived exertion (RPE) were collected. Mean±SD TTE was 96±20?min in T1 vs. 101±29?min in T2 (P=0.3). The mean±95% confidence intervals (CI) of the coefficient of variance (CV) was 5.4% (1.4-9.6). The average intraclass correlation coefficient (±?95% CI) was 0.88 (0.67-0.96) between trials. The respiratory-exchange ratio was not different between trials, T1: 0.87±0.1 and T2: 0.89±0.1 (P>0.05) and neither was total whole-body carbohydrate oxidation (2.1±0.4 g·min-1 and 2.3±0.6 g·min-1), fat oxidation (0.6±0.2 g·min-1), HR (178±8 and 175±7 beats·min-1) or RPE (17±3 and 16±3). These results suggest that use of prolonged treadmill-based TTE can be a reliable research tool to assess human endurance capacity in aerobically-trained men and women.
© Copyright 2016 International Journal of Sports Medicine. Thieme. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:endurance sports training science
Published in:International Journal of Sports Medicine
Language:English
Published: 2016
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1055/s-0035-1555928
Volume:37
Issue:3
Pages:219-223
Document types:article
Level:advanced