Oxygenation trends in vastus lateralis muscle during incremental and intense anaerobic cycle exercise in young men and women

2001 
The purposes of this study were to compare the acute cardiorespiratory responses and muscle oxygenation trends during incremental cycle exercise to exhaustion with those observed during 30 s and 45 s Wingate tests in healthy men and women, and to examine the relationships between selected variables among these tests. Seventeen healthy junior badminton players, nine men [mean age, height, body mass and maximal oxygen uptake (\( \dot V{\rm O}_{{\rm 2max}} \) ) were 15.8 (SD 0.8) years, 1.73 (SD 0.08) m, 65.6 (SD 6.3) kg and 50.6 (SD 6.9) ml·kg–1·min–1 respectively] and eight women [mean age, height, body mass and \( \dot V{\rm O}_{{\rm 2max}} \) were 16.6 (SD 1.0) years, 1.65 (SD 0.03) m, 62.7 (SD 4.5) kg and 42.0 (SD 5.0) ml·kg–1·min–1 respectively] completed a stepwise incremental exercise test to voluntary exhaustion and two Wingate tests lasting 30 s and 45 s in three separate sessions in random order. Cardiorespiratory responses were monitored breath-by-breath using a metabolic cart interfaced with an electrocardiogram. Tissue absorbancy trends were continuously recorded from the right vastus lateralis muscle using dual wavelength near infrared spectroscopy. Oxygen uptake and heart rate were significantly higher during the incremental test when compared to the two Wingate tests in the men and women. However, the oxygen pulse (oxygen utilization per heart beat, i.e., the product of stroke volume and arterio-venous oxygen difference) was not significantly different among the three tests in both sexes. The minimal tissue absorbancy, an index of muscle deoxygenation, was also not significantly different among the three tests in both sexes. Significant relationships were observed for the oxygen uptake (r 2=0.72) and oxygen pulse (r 2=0.60) between the incremental and 45 s Wingate tests in the sample for both sexes combined. The minimal tissue absorbancy, however, was not significantly related between the two tests. It was concluded that the significantly higher oxygen uptake during the incremental test was due to the higher heart rate because: firstly, oxygen pulse was not significantly different among the three tests, and secondly, peripheral factors, as indicated by the changes in muscle oxygenation, were not significantly different among the three test conditions. Although the peak values of the oxygen pulse during the incremental and 45 s Wingate tests were significantly correlated, the common variance of the minimal tissue absorbancy measurements between these two tests was quite low, suggesting considerable variation in the peripheral contribution during these two tests.
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