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Impaired interval exercise responses in elite female cyclists at moderate simulated altitude.
Authors:M J Brosnan  D T Martin  A G Hahn  C J Gore  J A Hawley
Institution:Exercise Metabolism Group, Department of Human Biology and Movement Science, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology University, Bundoora, Victoria 3183, Australia 2616.
Abstract:The effect of hypoxia on the response to interval exercise was determined in eight elite female cyclists during two interval sessions: a sustained 3 x 10-min endurance set (5-min recovery) and a repeat sprint session comprising three sets of 6 x 15-s sprints (work-to-relief ratios were 1:3, 1:2, and 1:1 for the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd sets, respectively, with 3 min between each set). During exercise, cyclists selected their maximum power output and breathed either atmospheric air (normoxia, 20.93% O(2)) or a hypoxic gas mix (hypoxia, 17.42% O(2)). Power output was lower in hypoxia vs. normoxia throughout the endurance set (244+/-18 vs. 226+/-17, 234+/-18 vs. 221+/-25, and 235+/-18 vs. 221+/-25 W for 1st, 2nd, and 3rd sets, respectively; P< 0.05) but was lower only in the latter stages of the second and third sets of the sprints (452+/-56 vs. 429+/-49 and 403+/-54 vs. 373+/- 43 W, respectively; P<0.05). Hypoxia lowered blood O(2) saturation during the endurance set (92.9+/-2.9 vs. 95.4+/-1.5%; P<0.05) but not during repeat sprints. We conclude that, when elite cyclists select their maximum exercise intensity, both sustained (10 min) and short-term (15 s) power are impaired during hypoxia, which simulated moderate ( approximately 2,100 m) altitude.
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