Effects of Including Sprints in LIT Sessions during a 14-d Camp on Muscle Biology and Performance Measures in Elite Cyclists

Almquist, Nicki Winfield; Wilhelmsen, Malene; Ellefsen, Stian; Sandbakk, Oyvind; Ronnestad, Bent R.

Abstract

Purpose: This study investigated the effects of including sprints within low-intensity training (LIT) sessions during a 14-d training camp focusing on LIT, followed by 10-d recovery (Rec), on performance and performance-related measures in elite cyclists. Methods: During the camp, a sprint training group (SPR; n = 9) included 12 x 30-s maximal sprints during five LIT sessions, whereas a control group (CON; n = 9) performed distance-matched LIT only. Training load was equally increased in both groups by 48% +/- 27% during the training camp and subsequently decreased by -56% +/- 23% during the recovery period compared with habitual training. Performance tests were conducted before the training camp (Pre) and after Rec. Muscle biopsies, hematological measures, and stress/recovery questionnaires were collected Pre and after the camp (Post). Results: Thirty-second sprint (SPR vs CON: 4% +/- 4%, P < 0.01) and 5-min mean power (SPR vs CON: 4% +/- 8%, P = 0.04) changed differently between groups. In muscle, Na+-K+ beta 1 protein content changed differently between groups, decreasing in CON compared with SPR (- 8% +/- 14%, P = 0.04), whereas other proteins showed similar changes. SPR and CON displayed similar increases in red blood cell volume (SPR: 2.6% +/- 4.7%, P = 0.07; CON: 3.9% +/- 4.5%, P = 0.02) and (V)over dotO(2) at 4 mmol.L-1 [BLa-] (SPR: 2.5% +/- 3.3%, P = 0.03; CON: 2.2% +/- 3.0%, P = 0.04). No changes were seen for (V)over dotO(2max), Wmax, hematological measures, muscle enzyme activity, and stress/recovery measures. Conclusions: Inclusion of 30-s sprints within LIT sessions during a high-volume training camp affected competition-relevant performance measures and Na+-K+ beta 1 protein content differently from LIT only, without affecting sport-specific stress/ recovery or any other physiological measure in elite cyclists.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000754535600014 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: MEDICINE & SCIENCE IN SPORTS & EXERCISE
Volumen: 53
Número: 11
Editorial: LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
Fecha de publicación: 2021
Página de inicio: 2333
Página final: 2345
DOI:

10.1249/MSS.0000000000002709

Notas: ISI