Cardiorespiratory Changes During Prolonged Downhill Versus Uphill Treadmill Exercise

Affiliation auteurs!!!! Error affiliation !!!!
TitreCardiorespiratory Changes During Prolonged Downhill Versus Uphill Treadmill Exercise
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2020
AuteursGarnier Y, Lepers R, Assadi H, Paizis C
JournalINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SPORTS MEDICINE
Volume41
Pagination69-74
Date PublishedFEB
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN0172-4622
Mots-clésDownhill, Energy cost, oxygen uptake, Treadmill running, Uphill
Résumé

Oxygen uptake (V?O (2) ), heart rate (HR), energy cost (E (C) ) and oxygen pulse are lower during downhill compared to level or uphill locomotion. However, a change in oxygen pulse and E (C) during prolonged grade exercise is not well documented. This study investigated changes in cardiorespiratory responses and E (C) during 45-min grade exercises. Nine male healthy volunteers randomly ran at 75% HR reserve during 45-min exercise in a level (+1%), uphill (+15%) or downhill (-15%) condition. V?O (2) , minute ventilation (V? (E) ) and end-tidal carbon dioxide (P (et) CO (2) ) were recorded continuously with 5-min averaging between the 10 (th) and 15 (th) min (T1) and 40 (th) and 45 (th) min (T2). For a similar HR (157 +/- 3 bpm), V?O (2) , V? (E) , and P (et) CO (2) were lower during downhill compared to level and uphill conditions (p<0.01). V?O (2) and V? (E) decreased similarly from T1 to T2 for all conditions (all p<0.01), while P (et) CO (2) decreased only for the downhill condition (p<0.001). Uphill exercise required greater E (C) compared to level and downhill exercises. E (C) decreased only during the uphill condition between T1 and T2 (p<0.01). The lowest V?O (2) and E (C) during downhill exercise compared to uphill and level exercises suggests the involvement of passive elastic structures in force production during downhill. The lower cardiorespiratory response and the reduction in P (et) CO (2) during downhill running exercise, while E (C) remained constant, suggests an overdrive ventilation pattern likely due to a greater stimulation of efferent neural factors.

DOI10.1055/a-1015-0333