1Sport and Exercise Science Discipline Group, Faculty of Health, University of Technology Sydney (UTS), Moore Park, AUSTRALIA; 2New South Wales Institute of Sport (NSWIS), Sydney Olympic Park, AUSTRALIA; 3Department of Physiology, Australian Institute of Sport (AIS), Canberra, AUSTRALIA; and 4University of Canberra Research Institute for Sport and Exercise (UCRISE), Canberra, AUSTRALIA.
Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2017 Mar;49(3):509-517. doi: 10.1249/MSS.0000000000001138.
Independent heat and hypoxic exposure can enhance temperate endurance performance in trained athletes, although their combined effects remain unknown. This study examined whether the addition of heat interval training during "live high, train low" (LHTL) hypoxic exposure would result in enhanced performance and physiological adaptations as compared with heat or temperate training.
Twenty-six well-trained runners completed 3 wk of interval training assigned to one of three conditions: 1) LHTL hypoxic exposure plus heat training (H + H; 3000 m for 13 h·d, train at 33°C, 60% relative humidity [RH]), 2) heat training with no hypoxic exposure (HOT, live at <600 m and train at 33°C, 60% RH), or 3) temperate training with no hypoxic exposure (CONT; live at <600 m and train at 14°C, 55% RH). Performance 3-km time-trials (3-km TT), running economy, hemoglobin mass, and plasma volume were assessed using magnitude-based inferences statistical approach before (Baseline), after (Post), and 3 wk (3wkP) after exposure.
Compared with Baseline, 3-km TT performance was likely increased in HOT at 3wkP (-3.3% ± 1.3%; mean ± 90% confidence interval), with no performance improvement in either H + H or CONT. Hemoglobin mass increased by 3.8% ± 1.8% at Post in H + H only. Plasma volume in HOT was possibly elevated above H + H and CONT at Post but not at 3wkP. Correlations between changes in 3-km TT performance and physiological adaptations were unclear.
Incorporating heat-based training into a 3-wk training block can improve temperate performance at 3 wk after exposure, with athlete psychology, physiology, and environmental dose all important considerations. Despite hematological adaptations, the addition of LHTL to heat interval training has no greater 3-km TT performance benefit than temperate training alone.
独立的热暴露和低氧暴露可以提高训练有素的运动员的温带耐力表现,尽管它们的联合作用尚不清楚。本研究旨在探讨在“高住低训”(LHTL)低氧暴露期间增加热间歇训练是否会导致与热或温带训练相比,表现和生理适应性的增强。
26 名训练有素的跑步者完成了 3 周的间歇训练,分配到以下三种条件之一:1)LHTL 低氧暴露加热训练(H + H;3000 米,13 小时·天,在 33°C、60%相对湿度[RH]下训练),2)无低氧暴露的热训练(HOT,居住在<600 米,在 33°C、60%RH 下训练),或 3)无低氧暴露的温带训练(CONT;居住在<600 米,在 14°C、55%RH 下训练)。使用基于幅度的推断统计方法在暴露前(基线)、暴露后(后期)和暴露后 3 周(3wkP)评估 3 公里计时赛(3-km TT)、跑步经济性、血红蛋白质量和血浆容量。
与基线相比,HOT 在 3wkP 时 3-km TT 表现可能提高(-3.3%±1.3%;平均值±90%置信区间),而 H + H 或 CONT 中则没有提高。只有 H + H 在后期血红蛋白质量增加了 3.8%±1.8%。HOT 中的血浆体积在后期可能高于 H + H 和 CONT,但在 3wkP 时则不然。3-km TT 表现变化与生理适应性之间的相关性尚不清楚。
在 3 周训练期内纳入基于热的训练可以提高暴露后 3 周的温带表现,运动员的心理、生理和环境剂量都是重要的考虑因素。尽管有血液学适应性,但与单独进行温带训练相比,将 LHTL 加入热间歇训练并没有带来更大的 3-km TT 表现收益。