Athlete Health and Performance Research Centre, Aspetar, Qatar Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital, PO Box 29222, Doha, Qatar,
Eur J Appl Physiol. 2014;114(7):1521-32. doi: 10.1007/s00421-014-2883-0. Epub 2014 Apr 19.
This study investigated the isolated and combined effects of heat [temperate (22 °C/30 % rH) vs. hot (35 °C/40 % rH)] and hypoxia [sea level (FiO2 0.21) vs. moderate altitude (FiO2 0.15)] on exercise capacity and neuromuscular fatigue characteristics.
Eleven physically active subjects cycled to exhaustion at constant workload (66 % of the power output associated with their maximal oxygen uptake in temperate conditions) in four different environmental conditions [temperate/sea level (control), hot/sea level (hot), temperate/moderate altitude (hypoxia) and hot/moderate altitude (hot + hypoxia)]. Torque and electromyography (EMG) responses following electrical stimulation of the tibial nerve (plantar-flexion; soleus) were recorded before and 5 min after exercise.
Time to exhaustion was reduced (P < 0.05) in hot (-35 ± 15 %) or hypoxia (-36 ± 14 %) compared to control (61 ± 28 min), while hot + hypoxia (-51 ± 20 %) further compromised exercise capacity (P < 0.05). However, the effect of temperature or altitude on end-exercise core temperature (P = 0.089 and P = 0.070, respectively) and rating of perceived exertion (P > 0.05) did not reach significance. Maximal voluntary contraction torque, voluntary activation (twitch interpolation) and peak twitch torque decreased from pre- to post-exercise (-9 ± 1, -4 ± 1 and -6 ± 1 % all trials compounded, respectively; P < 0.05), with no effect of the temperature or altitude. M-wave amplitude and root mean square activity were reduced (P < 0.05) in hot compared to temperate conditions, while normalized maximal EMG activity did not change. Altitude had no effect on any measured parameters.
Moderate hypoxia in combination with heat stress reduces cycling time to exhaustion without modifying neuromuscular fatigue characteristics. Impaired oxygen delivery or increased cardiovascular strain, increasing relative exercise intensity, may have also contributed to earlier exercise cessation.
本研究旨在探讨热(温和(22°C/30%相对湿度)与热(35°C/40%相对湿度))和缺氧(海平面(FiO2 0.21)与中度海拔(FiO2 0.15))对运动能力和神经肌肉疲劳特征的单独和联合影响。
11 名身体活跃的受试者在四种不同环境条件下(温和/海平面(对照)、热/海平面(热)、温和/中度海拔(缺氧)和热/中度海拔(热+缺氧))以恒定负荷(在温和条件下与最大摄氧量相关的功率输出的 66%)进行至力竭的自行车运动。在运动前后记录经胫骨神经(跖屈;比目鱼肌)电刺激后的扭矩和肌电图(EMG)反应。
与对照(61±28 分钟)相比,热(-35±15%)或缺氧(-36±14%)降低了力竭时间(P<0.05),而热+缺氧(-51±20%)进一步降低了运动能力(P<0.05)。然而,温度或海拔对运动结束时核心温度(P=0.089 和 P=0.070,分别)和感知用力程度(P>0.05)的影响没有达到显著水平。最大自主收缩扭矩、自愿激活(抽搐插值)和最大抽搐扭矩在运动前后均下降(所有试验复合,分别为-9±1、-4±1 和-6±1%;P<0.05),且温度或海拔无影响。与温和条件相比,热条件下 M 波幅度和均方根活动降低(P<0.05),而归一化最大 EMG 活动没有变化。海拔对任何测量参数均无影响。
中度缺氧与热应激相结合会缩短自行车力竭时间,而不会改变神经肌肉疲劳特征。可能由于供氧减少或心血管压力增加,增加相对运动强度,导致运动更早终止。