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The Effects of Normobaric Hypoxia on the Acute Physiological Responses to Resistance Training: A Narrative Review

journal contribution
posted on 2025-03-26, 05:11 authored by Giselle AllsoppGiselle Allsopp, FA Britto, Craig WrightCraig Wright, L Deldicque
Abstract Allsopp, GL, Britto, FA, Wright, CR, and Deldicque, L. The effects of normobaric hypoxia on the acute physiological responses to resistance training: a narrative review. J Strength Cond Res XX(X): 000–000, 2024—Athletes have used altitude training for many years as a strategy to improve endurance performance. The use of resistance training in simulated altitude (normobaric hypoxia) is a growing strategy that aims to improve the hypertrophy and strength adaptations to training. An increasing breadth of research has characterized the acute physiological responses to resistance training in hypoxia, often with the goal to elucidate the mechanisms by which hypoxia may improve the training adaptations. There is currently no consensus on the overall effectiveness of hypoxic resistance training for strength and hypertrophy adaptations, nor the underlying biochemical pathways involved. There are, however, numerous interesting physiological responses that are amplified by performing resistance training in hypoxia. These include potential changes to the energy system contribution to exercise and alterations to the level of metabolic stress, hormone and cytokine production, autonomic regulation, and other hypoxia-induced cellular pathways. This review describes the foundational exercise physiology underpinning the acute responses to resistance training in normobaric hypoxia, potential applications to clinical populations, including training considerations for athletic populations. The review also presents a summary of the ideal training parameters to promote metabolic stress and associated training adaptations. There are currently many gaps in our understanding of the physiological responses to hypoxic resistance training, partly caused by the infancy of the research field and diversity of hypoxic and training parameters.<p></p>

History

Related Materials

Location

Philadelphia, Pa.

Open access

  • No

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research

Volume

38

Pagination

2001-2011

ISSN

1064-8011

eISSN

1533-4287

Issue

11

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)