The effect of exercise hyperpnea on gross efficiency and anaerobic capacity estimates during a 3-min cycle time trial
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28101Date
2022-12-22Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
This study aimed to analyze the effect of exercise-induced hyperpnea on gross efficiency (GE) and anaerobic capacity estimates during a self-paced 3-min supramaximal cycle time trial (TT). Fourteen highly-trained male cyclists performed 7×4-min submaximal stages, a 6-min passive rest, a 3-min TT, a 5-min passive rest, and a 6-min submaximal stage. Three models were based on the 7×4-min linear regression extrapolation method, using (1) the conventional model (7-YLIN); (2) the same 7-YLIN model but correcting for the additional ventilatory cost (i.e., hyperpnea) (7-YLIN-V-cor); and, (3) accounting for linearly declining GE during the TT (7-YLIN-D). The other three models were based on GE from the last submaximal stage, using the conventional model (GELAST) and the same modifications as described for 7+YLIN, i.e., (1) GELAST, (2) GELAST-V-cor, and (3) GELAST-D. The GELAST model generated 18% higher values of anaerobic capacity than the 7-YLIN model (P<0.05). During the TT, the hyperpnea corrected model (i.e., 7-YLIN-V-cor or GELAST-V-cor) generated, compared to the respective conventional model (i.e., 7-YLIN or GELAST), ~0.7 percentage points lower GE and ~11% higher anaerobic capacity (all, P<0.05). The post-TT GE was 1.9 percentage points lower (P<0.001) and the 7-YLIN-D or GELAST-D model generated, compared to the respective conventional model, a lower GE (~1.0 percentage points) and ~17% higher anaerobic capacity during the TT (all, P<0.05). In conclusion, the correction for a declining GE due to hyperpnea during a supramaximal TT resulted in an increased required total metabolic rate and anaerobic energy expenditure compared to the conventional models.
Publisher
American Physiological SocietyCitation
Andersson E, Osborne J, Stöggl TL, Bach. The effect of exercise hyperpnea on gross efficiency and anaerobic capacity estimates during a 3-min cycle time trial. Journal of applied physiology. 2022Metadata
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