Performance and submaximal adaptations to additional speed-endurance training vs. continuous moderate-intensity aerobic training in male endurance athletes

We examined performance and submaximal adaptations to additional treadmill-based speed-endurance training (SET) vs. continuous moderate-intensity aerobic training (MIT) twice / week. Twenty-two male endurance athletes were tested before and after 10-week SET (6-12 × 30-s sprints separated by 3-min rest intervals) and MIT (20-40 min continuous running at ~70% maximal oxygen uptake [V?O 2max ]). The SET group attained greater acute heart rate (HR) and blood lactate responses than the MIT group (d = 0.86-0.91). The SET group improved performance in a time-to-exhaustion trial, V?O 2max , and lactate threshold (d = 0.50-0.73), whereas no training-induced changes were observed in the MIT group. Additionally, the SET group reduced oxygen uptake, mean HR and improved running economy (d = 0.53-0.86) during running at 10 and 12 km·h-1. Additional SET imposes greater physiological demands than MIT resulting in superior performance adaptations and reduced energy cost in endurance athletes.
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Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:endurance sports training science
Tagging:Vergleich
Published in:Journal of Human Kinetics
Language:English
Published: 2022
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/hukin-2022-0060
Volume:83
Pages:277-285
Document types:article
Level:advanced