Post-swim oxygen consumption: assessment methodologies and kinetics analysis

Objective: This study aimed at comparing different recovery-based methods to assess the highest exercise oxygen uptake value ( V˙O2peak) when swimming at low-moderate, heavy and severe intensities. Complementarily, the different recovery curve kinetics were analysed. Approach: Eighteen competitive s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physiological measurement 2020-10, Vol.41 (10), p.105005-105005
Hauptverfasser: Monteiro, Ana Sofia, Carvalho, Diogo D, Azevedo, Rui, Vilas-Boas, João Paulo, Zacca, Rodrigo, Fernandes, Ricardo J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective: This study aimed at comparing different recovery-based methods to assess the highest exercise oxygen uptake value ( V˙O2peak) when swimming at low-moderate, heavy and severe intensities. Complementarily, the different recovery curve kinetics were analysed. Approach: Eighteen competitive swimmers performed a 5 × 200 m front crawl intermittent protocol (0.05 m · s−1 increments and 3 min intervals), with respiratory gas exchange being continuously measured breath-by-breath during and post-exercise using a portable gas analyser. The directly determined V˙O2peak ( V˙O2dir) was compared with the values obtained by linear and exponential backward extrapolations (of different intervals) and the recovery curve mathematical modelling. Main results: V˙O2dir rose with intensity increase: 41.96 ± 6.22, 46.36 ± 6.89 and 50.97 ± 7.28 ml · kg−1 min−1 for low-moderate, heavy and severe swims. Linear and exponential regressions applied to the first 20 s of recovery presented the V˙O2peak values closest to V˙O2dir at low-moderate (42.80 ± 5.54 vs 42.88 ± 5.58 ml kg−1 min−1), heavy (47.12 ± 4.91 vs 47.48 ± 5.09 ml kg−1 min−1) and severe intensity domains (51.24 ± 6.89 vs 53.60 ± 8.54 ml kg−1 · min−1, respectively; r = 0.5-0.8, p < 0.05). The mono-exponential function was the best fit at low-moderate and heavy intensities, while the bi-exponential function better characterized the severe exercise domain (with a slow component amplitude, time delay and time constant of 6.2 ± 2.3 ml kg−1 min−1, 116.6 ± 24.3 and 39.9 ± 15.2 s, respectively). Significance: The backward extrapolation of the first 20 s of recovery is the best method to assess the V˙O2peak for a large spectrum of swimming intensities. Complementarily, intensity increases imply different recovery curve kinetics, particularly a mono-exponential behaviour for low-moderate and heavy exertions and a bi-exponential dynamics for severe paces.
ISSN:0967-3334
1361-6579
DOI:10.1088/1361-6579/abb143