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The effect of a 4-week, remotely administered, post-exercise passive leg heating intervention on determinants of endurance performance.
- Source :
-
European journal of applied physiology [Eur J Appl Physiol] 2024 Jul 25. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Jul 25. - Publication Year :
- 2024
- Publisher :
- Ahead of Print
-
Abstract
- Purpose: Post-exercise passive heating has been reported to augment adaptations associated with endurance training. The current study evaluated the effect of a 4-week remotely administered, post-exercise passive leg heating protocol, using an electrically heated layering ensemble, on determinants of endurance performance.<br />Methods: Thirty recreationally trained participants were randomly allocated to either a post-exercise passive leg heating (PAH, n = 16) or unsupervised training only control group (CON, n = 14). The PAH group wore the passive heating ensemble for 90-120 min/day, completing a total of 20 (16 post-exercise and 4 stand-alone leg heating) sessions across 4 weeks. Whole-body (peak oxygen uptake, gas exchange threshold, gross efficiency and pulmonary oxygen uptake kinetics), single-leg exercise (critical torque and NIRS-derived muscle oxygenation), resting vascular characteristics (flow-mediated dilation) and angiogenic blood measures (nitrate, vascular endothelial growth factor and hypoxia inducible factor 1-α) were recorded to characterize the endurance phenotype. All measures were assessed before (PRE), at 2 weeks (MID) and after (POST) the intervention.<br />Results: There was no effect of the intervention on test of whole-body endurance capacity, vascular function or blood markers (p > 0.05). However, oxygen kinetics were adversely affected by PAH, denoted by a slowing of the phase II time constant; τ (p = 0.02). Furthermore, critical torque-deoxygenation ratio was improved in CON relative to PAH (p = 0.03).<br />Conclusion: We have demonstrated that PAH had no ergogenic benefit but instead elicited some unfavourable effects on sub-maximal exercise characteristics in recreationally trained individuals.<br /> (© 2024. The Author(s).)
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1439-6327
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- European journal of applied physiology
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 39052044
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s00421-024-05558-4