Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9076159 | Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport | 2005 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to determine the time sustained near ÌO2max in two interval training (IT) swimming sessions comprising 4Ã400 m (IT4Ã4oo) or 16x100 (IT16Ã100). Elite swimmers (Mean±SD age 18±2 yrs; body mass 66.9±6.5 kg; swim ÌO2max 55.7±5.8 ml·kgâ1·min-1) completed three experimental sessions at a 50-m indoor pool over a one week period. The first test comprised a 5 à 200-m incremental test to exhaustion for determination of the pulmonary ventilation threshold (VT, m·sâ1), ÌO2max, the velocity associated with ÌO2max (ÌO2max, m·sâ1) and maximum heart rate (HRmax, b·minâ1). The remaining two tests involved the IT4Ã4oo and IT16Ã100 performed in a randomised order. The two IT sessions where completed at a velocity representing 25% of the difference between the VT and the ÌO2max (Î25%) and in the same work to rest ratio. During the IT sessions ÌO2 as well as HR were measured. The duration (s) >90% ÌO2max, also the duration (s) >90% HRmax, were not significantly different in the IT16Ã100 and IT4Ã4oo. However, limits of agreement (LIMAG) analysis demonstrated considerable individual variation in the time >90% ÌO2max (mean difference ±2SD =222±819 s) and the time >90% HRmax (mean difference ±2SD =61±758 s) between the two IT sessions. This factor deserves further research to establish the characteristics of those athletes which influence the physiological responses in IT of short or longer duration repetitions.
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Authors
D.J. Bentley, B. Roels, P. Hellard, C. Fauquet, S. Libicz, G.P. Millet,