Effect of tapering after a period of high-volume sprint interval training on running performance and muscular adaptations in moderately trained runners

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Effect of tapering after a period of high-volume sprint interval training on running performance and muscular adaptations in moderately trained runners. / Skovgaard, Casper; Almquist, Nicki Winfield; Kvorning, Thue; Christensen, Peter Møller; Bangsbo, Jens.

I: Journal of Applied Physiology, Bind 124, Nr. 2, 2018, s. 259-267.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Skovgaard, C, Almquist, NW, Kvorning, T, Christensen, PM & Bangsbo, J 2018, 'Effect of tapering after a period of high-volume sprint interval training on running performance and muscular adaptations in moderately trained runners', Journal of Applied Physiology, bind 124, nr. 2, s. 259-267. https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00472.2017

APA

Skovgaard, C., Almquist, N. W., Kvorning, T., Christensen, P. M., & Bangsbo, J. (2018). Effect of tapering after a period of high-volume sprint interval training on running performance and muscular adaptations in moderately trained runners. Journal of Applied Physiology, 124(2), 259-267. https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00472.2017

Vancouver

Skovgaard C, Almquist NW, Kvorning T, Christensen PM, Bangsbo J. Effect of tapering after a period of high-volume sprint interval training on running performance and muscular adaptations in moderately trained runners. Journal of Applied Physiology. 2018;124(2):259-267. https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00472.2017

Author

Skovgaard, Casper ; Almquist, Nicki Winfield ; Kvorning, Thue ; Christensen, Peter Møller ; Bangsbo, Jens. / Effect of tapering after a period of high-volume sprint interval training on running performance and muscular adaptations in moderately trained runners. I: Journal of Applied Physiology. 2018 ; Bind 124, Nr. 2. s. 259-267.

Bibtex

@article{3b11b9957cde4aeeb945235a6a22d3b9,
title = "Effect of tapering after a period of high-volume sprint interval training on running performance and muscular adaptations in moderately trained runners",
abstract = "The effect of tapering following a period of high-volume sprint interval training (SIT) and a basic volume of aerobic training on performance and muscle adaptations in moderately trained runners was examined. Eleven (8 males, 3 females) runners (maximum oxygen uptake (VO2-max): 56.8±2.9 mL·min(-1)·kg(-1); mean±SD) conducted high-volume SIT (HV; 20 SIT sessions; 8-12 x 30-s all-out) for 40 days followed by 18 days of tapering (TAP; 4 SIT sessions; 4 x 30-s all-out). Before and after HV as well as midway through and at the end of TAP, the subjects completed a 10-km running test and a repeated running test at 90% of vVO2-max to exhaustion (RRT). In addition, a biopsy from m. vastus lateralis was obtained at rest. Performance during RRT was better (P<0.01) at the end of TAP than before HV (6.8±0.5 vs 5.6±0.5 min; means±SE), and 10-km performance was 2.7% better (P<0.05) midway through (40.7±0.7 min) and at the end of TAP (40.7±0.6 min) than after HV (41.8±0.9 min). The expression of muscle Na(+),K(+)-ATPase (NKA)α1, NKAβ1, phospholemman (FXYD1) and sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium transport ATPase (SERCA1) increased (P<0.05) during HV and remained higher during TAP. In addition, oxygen uptake at 60% of vVO2-max was lower (P<0.05) at the end of TAP than before and after HV. Thus, tapering after a period of high-volume SIT improved 10-km performance and running economy, and short-duration exercise capacity was better than before the high-volume SIT period together with higher expression of muscle proteins related to Na(+)/K(+) transport and Ca(2+) re-uptake.",
keywords = "Running economy, Na+-K+-ATPase, Sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium transport ATPase",
author = "Casper Skovgaard and Almquist, {Nicki Winfield} and Thue Kvorning and Christensen, {Peter M{\o}ller} and Jens Bangsbo",
note = "CURIS 2018 NEXS 043",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1152/japplphysiol.00472.2017",
language = "English",
volume = "124",
pages = "259--267",
journal = "Journal of Applied Physiology",
issn = "8750-7587",
publisher = "American Physiological Society",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Effect of tapering after a period of high-volume sprint interval training on running performance and muscular adaptations in moderately trained runners

AU - Skovgaard, Casper

AU - Almquist, Nicki Winfield

AU - Kvorning, Thue

AU - Christensen, Peter Møller

AU - Bangsbo, Jens

N1 - CURIS 2018 NEXS 043

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - The effect of tapering following a period of high-volume sprint interval training (SIT) and a basic volume of aerobic training on performance and muscle adaptations in moderately trained runners was examined. Eleven (8 males, 3 females) runners (maximum oxygen uptake (VO2-max): 56.8±2.9 mL·min(-1)·kg(-1); mean±SD) conducted high-volume SIT (HV; 20 SIT sessions; 8-12 x 30-s all-out) for 40 days followed by 18 days of tapering (TAP; 4 SIT sessions; 4 x 30-s all-out). Before and after HV as well as midway through and at the end of TAP, the subjects completed a 10-km running test and a repeated running test at 90% of vVO2-max to exhaustion (RRT). In addition, a biopsy from m. vastus lateralis was obtained at rest. Performance during RRT was better (P<0.01) at the end of TAP than before HV (6.8±0.5 vs 5.6±0.5 min; means±SE), and 10-km performance was 2.7% better (P<0.05) midway through (40.7±0.7 min) and at the end of TAP (40.7±0.6 min) than after HV (41.8±0.9 min). The expression of muscle Na(+),K(+)-ATPase (NKA)α1, NKAβ1, phospholemman (FXYD1) and sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium transport ATPase (SERCA1) increased (P<0.05) during HV and remained higher during TAP. In addition, oxygen uptake at 60% of vVO2-max was lower (P<0.05) at the end of TAP than before and after HV. Thus, tapering after a period of high-volume SIT improved 10-km performance and running economy, and short-duration exercise capacity was better than before the high-volume SIT period together with higher expression of muscle proteins related to Na(+)/K(+) transport and Ca(2+) re-uptake.

AB - The effect of tapering following a period of high-volume sprint interval training (SIT) and a basic volume of aerobic training on performance and muscle adaptations in moderately trained runners was examined. Eleven (8 males, 3 females) runners (maximum oxygen uptake (VO2-max): 56.8±2.9 mL·min(-1)·kg(-1); mean±SD) conducted high-volume SIT (HV; 20 SIT sessions; 8-12 x 30-s all-out) for 40 days followed by 18 days of tapering (TAP; 4 SIT sessions; 4 x 30-s all-out). Before and after HV as well as midway through and at the end of TAP, the subjects completed a 10-km running test and a repeated running test at 90% of vVO2-max to exhaustion (RRT). In addition, a biopsy from m. vastus lateralis was obtained at rest. Performance during RRT was better (P<0.01) at the end of TAP than before HV (6.8±0.5 vs 5.6±0.5 min; means±SE), and 10-km performance was 2.7% better (P<0.05) midway through (40.7±0.7 min) and at the end of TAP (40.7±0.6 min) than after HV (41.8±0.9 min). The expression of muscle Na(+),K(+)-ATPase (NKA)α1, NKAβ1, phospholemman (FXYD1) and sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium transport ATPase (SERCA1) increased (P<0.05) during HV and remained higher during TAP. In addition, oxygen uptake at 60% of vVO2-max was lower (P<0.05) at the end of TAP than before and after HV. Thus, tapering after a period of high-volume SIT improved 10-km performance and running economy, and short-duration exercise capacity was better than before the high-volume SIT period together with higher expression of muscle proteins related to Na(+)/K(+) transport and Ca(2+) re-uptake.

KW - Running economy

KW - Na+-K+-ATPase

KW - Sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium transport ATPase

U2 - 10.1152/japplphysiol.00472.2017

DO - 10.1152/japplphysiol.00472.2017

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28935825

VL - 124

SP - 259

EP - 267

JO - Journal of Applied Physiology

JF - Journal of Applied Physiology

SN - 8750-7587

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 183736021