Lucía A, Joyos H, Chicharro J L
Departamento de Ciencias Morfológicas y Fisiología, Universidad Europea de Madrid, Spain.
Int J Sports Med. 2000 Oct;21(7):505-12. doi: 10.1055/s-2000-7420.
The purpose of this study was to identify possible physiological differences between professional cyclists who show best performance in hill climbing ("climbers") and those who excel in time trials ("time trialists"). To this end, professional, top-level climbers (C; n=8; age 26 +/- 1yr; height 176.0 +/- 2.0cm; body mass 63.6 +/- 2.2 kg) and time trialists (TT; n=6; 27 +/- 1yr; height 181.6 +/- 1.7 cm; body mass 72.3 +/- 2.3 kg) were required to perform two laboratory exercise tests on a cycle ergometer: a) a maximal exercise test (ramp protocol) and b) a constant load test of 20-min duration at approximately 80% of VO2max. Capillary blood lactate concentration and several gas exchange variables were measured during the maximal tests while determinations made during the submaximal tests also included: pH and bicarbonate concentration [HCO3-] in venous blood, and electromyographic (EMG) recordings from the vastus lateralis muscle to estimate root mean square voltage (rms-EMG) and mean power frequency (MPF). Both the maximal lactate concentration in capillary blood and VO2max were greater (p<0.05) in C than in TT (6.6 +/- 0.9 mM vs. 5.0 +/- 0.4 mM, respectively, and 78.4 +/- 3.2 ml x kg(-1) x min(-1) vs. 70.5 +/- 2.4 ml x kg(-1) x min(-1), respectively). Higher mean venous blood pH and [HCO3-] (p<0.05), rms-EMG (p<0.01) and MPF (p<0.05 at 10 and 15min of exercise and p < 0.01 at 5 and 20 min) were recorded in C throughout the submaximal tests. Our findings suggest that in top-level professional cyclists, climbing performance is mainly related to physiological factors (VO2max normalized for body mass, anaerobicl buffer capacity, motor unit recruitment) whereas time trialists tend to achieve greater absolute power outputs. It would also seem that other "technical" requirements of the sport (i. e. pedaling efficiency probably related to biomechanical factors etc.) may be associated with successful time trial performance.
本研究的目的是确定在爬坡中表现最佳的职业自行车运动员(“爬坡手”)和在计时赛中表现出色的运动员(“计时赛车手”)之间可能存在的生理差异。为此,要求职业顶级爬坡手(C组;n = 8;年龄26±1岁;身高176.0±2.0厘米;体重63.6±2.2千克)和计时赛车手(TT组;n = 6;27±1岁;身高181.6±1.7厘米;体重72.3±2.3千克)在自行车测力计上进行两项实验室运动测试:a)最大运动测试(斜坡方案)和b)在约80%最大摄氧量下持续20分钟的恒定负荷测试。在最大测试期间测量毛细血管血乳酸浓度和几个气体交换变量,而在次最大测试期间的测定还包括:静脉血中的pH值和碳酸氢盐浓度[HCO₃⁻],以及来自股外侧肌的肌电图(EMG)记录,以估计均方根电压(rms - EMG)和平均功率频率(MPF)。C组毛细血管血中的最大乳酸浓度和最大摄氧量均高于TT组(p<0.05)(分别为6.6±0.9毫摩尔/升和5.0±0.4毫摩尔/升,以及78.4±3.2毫升·千克⁻¹·分钟⁻¹和70.5±2.4毫升·千克⁻¹·分钟⁻¹)。在次最大测试过程中,C组在整个过程中记录到更高的平均静脉血pH值和[HCO₃⁻](p<0.05)、rms - EMG(p<0.01)和MPF(运动10分钟和15分钟时p<0.05,运动5分钟和20分钟时p<0.01)。我们的研究结果表明,在顶级职业自行车运动员中,爬坡表现主要与生理因素(体重标准化的最大摄氧量、无氧缓冲能力、运动单位募集)有关,而计时赛车手往往能实现更大的绝对功率输出。似乎这项运动的其他“技术”要求(即可能与生物力学因素等相关的蹬踏效率)可能与成功的计时赛表现有关。