Walsh Joel A, Dawber James P, Lepers Romuald, Brown Marc, Stapley Paul J
1Neural Control of Movement Laboratory, School of Medicine, Faculty of Science, Medicine and Health, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia; 2School of Mathematics and Applied Statistics, Faculty of Engineering and Information Sciences, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia; and 3University of Burgundy, INSERM-Laboratory of Cognition, Action and Sensory-motor Plasticity, Dijon, France.
J Strength Cond Res. 2017 Apr;31(4):1078-1086. doi: 10.1519/JSC.0000000000001556.
Walsh, JA, Dawber, JP, Lepers, R, Brown, M, and Stapley, PJ. Is moderate intensity cycling sufficient to induce cardiorespiratory and biomechanical modifications of subsequent running? J Strength Cond Res 31(4): 1078-1086, 2017-This study sought to determine whether prior moderate intensity cycling is sufficient to influence the cardiorespiratory and biomechanical responses during subsequent running. Cardiorespiratory and biomechanical variables measured after moderate intensity cycling were compared with control running at the same intensity. Eight highly trained, competitive triathletes completed 2 separate exercise tests; (a) a 10-minute control run (no prior cycling) and, (b) a 30-minute transition run (TR) (preceded by 20-minute of variable cadence cycling, i.e., run versus cycle-run). Respiratory, breathing frequency (fb), heart rate (HR), cost of running (Cr), rate constant, stride length, and stride frequency variables were recorded, normalized, and quantified at the mean response time (MRT), third minute, 10th minute (steady state), and overall for the control run (CR) and TR. Cost of running increased (p ≤ 0.05) at all respective times during the TR. The V[Combining Dot Above]E/V[Combining Dot Above]CO2 and respiratory exchange ratio (RER) were significantly (p < 0.01) elevated at the MRT and 10th minute of the TR. Furthermore, overall mean increases were recorded for Cr, V[Combining Dot Above]E, V[Combining Dot Above]E/V[Combining Dot Above]CO2, RER, fb (p < 0.01), and HR (p ≤ 0.05) during the TR. Rate constant values for oxygen uptake were significantly different between CR and TR (0.48 ± 0.04 vs. 0.89 ± 0.15; p < 0.01). Stride length decreased across all recorded points during the TR (p ≤ 0.05) and stride frequency increased at the MRT and 3 minutes (p < 0.01). The findings suggest that at moderate intensity, prior cycling influences the cardiorespiratory response during subsequent running. Furthermore, prior cycling seems to have a sustained effect on the Cr during subsequent running.
沃尔什,J.A.,道伯,J.P.,勒佩斯,R.,布朗,M.,以及斯塔普利,P.J.。中等强度骑行是否足以引发后续跑步时心肺功能和生物力学的改变?《力量与体能研究杂志》31(4): 1078 - 1086,2017年——本研究旨在确定先前的中等强度骑行是否足以影响后续跑步时的心肺功能和生物力学反应。将中等强度骑行后测量的心肺功能和生物力学变量与相同强度的对照跑步进行比较。八名训练有素的竞技铁人三项运动员完成了两项独立的运动测试;(a) 10分钟的对照跑步(无先前骑行),以及 (b) 30分钟的过渡跑步(TR)(之前有20分钟的可变踏频骑行,即跑步与骑行 - 跑步)。记录、归一化并量化了呼吸、呼吸频率(fb)、心率(HR)、跑步成本(Cr)、速率常数、步长和步频变量,分别在平均反应时间(MRT)、第三分钟、第十分钟(稳定状态)以及对照跑步(CR)和TR的全程进行。在TR期间的所有相应时间,跑步成本均增加(p≤0.05)。在TR的MRT和第十分钟,V̇E/V̇CO2和呼吸交换率(RER)显著升高(p < 0.01)。此外,在TR期间,Cr、V̇E、V̇E/V̇CO2、RER、fb(p < 0.01)和HR(p≤0.05)均记录到总体平均增加。CR和TR之间的摄氧速率常数显著不同(0.48±0.04对0.89±0.15;p < 0.01)。在TR期间,所有记录点的步长均减小(p≤0.05),步频在MRT和三分钟时增加(p < 0.01)。研究结果表明,在中等强度下,先前的骑行会影响后续跑步时的心肺功能反应。此外,先前的骑行似乎对后续跑步时的Cr有持续影响。