File(s) under permanent embargo
Increased hypoxic dose after training at low altitude with 9h per night at 3000m normobaric hypoxia
journal contribution
posted on 2015-12-01, 00:00 authored by Amelia CarrAmelia Carr, P U Saunders, B S Vallance, L A Garvican-Lewis, C J GoreThis study examined effects of low altitude training and a live-high: train-low protocol (combining both natural and simulated modalities) on haemoglobin mass (Hbmass), maximum oxygen consumption (VO2max), time to exhaustion, and submaximal exercise measures. Eighteen elite-level race-walkers were assigned to one of two experimental groups; lowHH (low Hypobaric Hypoxia: continuous exposure to 1380 m for 21 consecutive days; n = 10) or a combined low altitude training and nightly Normobaric Hypoxia (lowHH+NHnight: living and training at 1380 m, plus 9 h.night-1 at a simulated altitude of 3000 m using hypoxic tents; n = 8). A control group (CON; n = 10) lived and trained at 600 m. Measurement of Hbmass, time to exhaustion and VO2max was performed before and after the training intervention. Paired samples t-tests were used to assess absolute and percentage change pre and post-test differences within groups, and differences between groups were assessed using a one-way ANOVA with least significant difference post-hoc testing. Statistical significance was tested at p < 0.05. There was a 3.7% increase in Hbmass in lowHH+NHnight compared with CON (p = 0.02). In comparison to baseline, Hbmass increased by 1.2% (±1.4%) in the lowHH group, 2.6% (±1.8%) in lowHH+NHnight, and there was a decrease of 0.9% (±4.9%) in CON. VO2max increased by ~4% within both experimental conditions but was not significantly greater than the 1% increase in CON. There was a ~9% difference in pre and post-intervention values in time to exhaustion after lowHH+NH-night (p = 0.03) and a ~8% pre to post-intervention difference (p = 0.006) after lowHH only. We recommend low altitude (1380 m) combined with sleeping in altitude tents (3000 m) as one effective alternative to traditional altitude training methods, which can improve Hbmass.
History
Journal
Journal of Sports Science and MedicineVolume
14Issue
4Pagination
776 - 782eISSN
1303-2968Publication classification
C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2015, Dept. of Sports Medicine, Medical Faculty of Uludag UniversityUsage metrics
Keywords
Science & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicineSport SciencesHypoxiahemoglobin masslive high: train lowathletic performancepeak oxygen uptakeTOTAL HEMOGLOBIN MASSMODERATE-ALTITUDEPHYSIOLOGICAL-RESPONSESEXERCISE PERFORMANCEAEROBIC PERFORMANCESIMULATED ALTITUDEERYTHROPOIESISVARIABILITYCHALLENGEEXPOSURELive highTrain lowMechanical Engineering