Hypoventilation training including maximal end-expiratory breath holding improves the ability to repeat high-intensity efforts in elite judo athletes.

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License: CC BY 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_E3C051185076
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Hypoventilation training including maximal end-expiratory breath holding improves the ability to repeat high-intensity efforts in elite judo athletes.
Journal
Frontiers in physiology
Author(s)
Woorons X., Faucher C., Dufour S.P., Brocherie F., Robach P., Connes P., Brugniaux J.V., Verges S., Gaston A.F., Millet G., Dupuy O., Pichon A.
ISSN
1664-042X (Print)
ISSN-L
1664-042X
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
15
Pages
1441696
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: epublish
Abstract
To investigate the effects of a repeated-sprint training in hypoxia induced by voluntary hypoventilation at low lung volume (RSH-VHL) including end-expiratory breath holding (EEBH) of maximal duration.
Over a 4-week period, twenty elite judo athletes (10 women and 10 men) were randomly split into two groups to perform 8 sessions of rowing repeated-sprint exercise either with RSH-VHL (each sprint with maximal EEBH) or with unrestricted breathing (RSN, 10-s sprints). Before (Pre-), 5 days after (Post-1) and 12 days after (Post-2) the last training session, participants completed a repeated-sprint ability (RSA) test on a rowing ergometer (8 × 25-s "all-out" repetitions interspersed with 25 s of passive recovery). Power output (PO), oxygen uptake, perceptual-motor capacity (turning off a traffic light with a predetermined code), cerebral (Δ[Hb <sub>diff</sub> ]) and muscle (Δ[Hb/Mb] <sub>diff</sub> ) oxygenation, cerebral total haemoglobin concentration (Δ[THb]) and muscle total haemoglobin/myoglobin concentration (Δ[THb/Mb]) were measured during each RSA repetition and/or recovery period.
From Pre-to Post-1 and Post-2, maximal PO, mean PO (MPO) of the first half of the test (repetitions 1-4), oxygen uptake, end-repetition cerebral Δ[Hb <sub>diff</sub> ] and Δ[THb], end-repetition muscle Δ[Hb/Mb] <sub>diff</sub> and Δ[THb/Mb] and perceptual-motor capacity remained unchanged in both groups. Conversely, MPO of the second half of the test (repetitions 5-8) was higher at Post-1 than at Pre-in RSH-VHL only (p < 0.01), resulting in a lower percentage decrement score over the entire RSA test (20.4% ± 6.5% vs. 23.9% ± 7.0%, p = 0.01). Furthermore, MPO (5-8) was greater in RSH-VHL than in RSN at Post-1 (p = 0.04). These performance results were accompanied by an increase in muscle Δ[THb/Mb] (p < 0.01) and a concomitant decrease in cerebral Δ[THb] (p < 0.01) during the recovery periods of the RSA test at Post-1 in RSH-VHL.
Four weeks of RSH-VHL including maximal EEBH improved the ability of elite judo athletes to repeat high-intensity efforts. The performance improvement, observed 5 days but not 12 days after training, may be due to enhanced muscle perfusion. The unchanged oxygen uptake and the decrease in cerebral regional blood volume observed at the same time suggest that a blood volume redistribution occurred after the RSH-VHL intervention to meet the increase in muscle perfusion.
Keywords
breath holding, hypercapnia, hypoxia, repeated-sprint ability, training
Pubmed
Open Access
Yes
Create date
25/10/2024 13:38
Last modification date
01/11/2024 14:02
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