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The higher the fraction of maximal oxygen uptake is during interval training, the greater is the cycling performance gain

Ingvill Odden, Lars Nymoen, Tomas Urianstad, Morten Kristoffersen, Daniel Hammarström, Joar Hansen, Knut Sindre Mølmen, Bent R. Rønnestad

2024European Journal of Sport Science18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract It has been suggested that time at a high fraction (%) of maximal oxygen uptake (VO 2max ) plays a decisive role for adaptations to interval training. Yet, no study has, to date, measured the % of VO 2max during all interval sessions throughout a prolonged training intervention and subsequently related it to the magnitude of training adaptations. Thus, the present study aimed to investigate the relationship between % of VO 2max achieved during an interval training intervention and changes in endurance performance and its physiological determinants in well‐trained cyclists. Twenty‐two cyclists (VO 2max 67.1 (6.4) mL·min −1 ·kg −1 ; males, n = 19; females, n = 3) underwent a 9‐week interval training intervention, consisting 21 sessions of 5 × 8‐min intervals conducted at their 40‐min highest sustainable mean power output (PO). Oxygen uptake was measured during all interval sessions, and the relationship between % of VO 2max during work intervals and training adaptations were investigated using linear regression. A performance index was calculated from several performance measures. With higher % of VO 2max during work intervals, greater improvements were observed for maximal PO during the VO 2max test (R 2 adjusted = 0.44, p = 0.009), PO at 4 mmol·L −1 [blood lactate] (R 2 adjusted = 0.25, p = 0.035), the performance index (R 2 adjusted = 0.36, p = 0.013), and VO 2max (R 2 adjusted = 0.54, p = 0.029). Other measures, such as % of maximal heart rate, were related to fewer outcome variables and exhibited poorer session‐to‐session repeatability compared to % of VO 2max . In conclusion, improvements in endurance measures were positively related to the % of VO 2max achieved during interval training. Percentage of VO 2max was the measure that best reflected the magnitude of training adaptations.

Topics & Concepts

CyclingVO2 maxInterval trainingHigh-intensity interval trainingInterval (graph theory)Training (meteorology)Physical medicine and rehabilitationPhysical therapyMedicineMathematicsInternal medicinePhysicsHeart rateCombinatoricsMeteorologyGeographyArchaeologyBlood pressureSports Performance and TrainingCardiovascular and exercise physiologySports injuries and prevention
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