1Institute of Health and Sports Science and Medicine, Juntendo University, Inzai, Japan; and 2Discipline of Exercise and Sport Science, Faculty of Health Sciences, The University of Sydney, Lidcombe, Australia.
J Strength Cond Res. 2014 Apr;28(4):1119-26. doi: 10.1519/JSC.0b013e3182a1fe5c.
Repeated high-intensity sprints incur substantial anaerobic metabolic challenges and create an acidic muscle milieu that is unfavorable for subsequent performance. Hyperventilation, resulting in respiratory alkalosis, acts as a compensatory mechanism for metabolic acidosis. This study tested the hypothesis that hyperventilation performed during recovery intervals would attenuate performance decrement in repeated sprint pedaling. Thirteen male university athletes performed 10 sets of 10-second maximal pedaling on a cycle ergometer with a 60-second recovery between sets under control (spontaneous breathing) and hyperventilation conditions in a crossover counter-balanced manner. Pedaling load was set at 0.075 × body mass. Peak and mean power outputs were documented for each set to compare performance decrements for 10 sets between conditions. Hyperventilation (60 breaths per minute and end-tidal partial pressure of CO2 maintained at 20-25 mm Hg) was performed 30 seconds before each sprint set. This intervention successfully increased blood pH by 0.03-0.07 but lowered P(CO2) by 1.2-8.4 mm Hg throughout exercise (p < 0.001). The peak and mean power outputs, and blood [La] accumulation were not significantly different between the conditions. However, a significant condition × time interaction existed for peak power (p = 0.035) and mean power (p = 0.023), demonstrating an attenuation in power decrement in later sprint sets with hyperventilation. In conclusion, hyperventilation implemented during recovery intervals of repeated sprint pedaling attenuated performance decrements in later exercise bouts that was associated with substantial metabolic acidosis. The practical implication is that hyperventilation may have a strategic role for enhancing training effectiveness and may give an edge in performance outcomes.
重复的高强度冲刺会带来很大的无氧代谢挑战,并导致肌肉环境呈酸性,不利于随后的表现。过度通气导致呼吸性碱中毒,是代谢性酸中毒的代偿机制。本研究旨在验证以下假设:在恢复间歇期进行过度通气会减轻重复冲刺踏车时的运动表现下降。13 名男性大学生运动员以交叉平衡的方式在周期测功计上进行了 10 组 10 秒的最大踏车运动,每组之间有 60 秒的恢复期,在对照(自主呼吸)和过度通气条件下进行。踏车负荷设定为 0.075×体重。记录每组的峰值和平均功率输出,以比较两种条件下 10 组的运动表现下降。在每组冲刺前 30 秒进行过度通气(60 次/分钟,呼气末二氧化碳分压维持在 20-25mmHg)。该干预措施成功地将血液 pH 值提高了 0.03-0.07,但在整个运动过程中使 P(CO2)降低了 1.2-8.4mmHg(p<0.001)。条件之间的峰值和平均功率输出以及血液[La]积累没有显著差异。然而,峰值功率(p=0.035)和平均功率(p=0.023)存在显著的条件×时间交互作用,表明过度通气后冲刺时的功率下降得到了缓解。总之,在重复冲刺踏车的恢复期进行过度通气可以减轻后期运动时的运动表现下降,这与严重的代谢性酸中毒有关。实际意义是,过度通气可能在增强训练效果方面具有战略作用,并可能在运动表现方面具有优势。