Effects of Low-Volume, High-Intensity Whole-Body Calisthenics on Army ROTC Cadets.

MILITARY MEDICINE(2015)

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摘要
Our objective was to determine the effects of high-intensity interval training (HIT) on fitness in Army Reserve Officers' Training Corps cadets. Twenty-six college-aged (20.5 +/- 1.7 years) participants completed 4 weeks of exercise training 3 days.wk(-1) consisting of either approximately 60 minutes of typical physical training or HIT wholebody calisthenics involving 4 to 7 sets of 30-second "all out" burpees separated by 4 minutes of active recovery. Several pre- and postintervention fitness variables were compared. We observed no changes across time or differences between groups in aerobic capacity, anaerobic capacity, or Army Physical Fitness Test performance (p > 0.05). However, there was a significant Group x Time interaction (p = 0.015) for skeletal muscle mitochondrial function (T-c: time constant of recovery). For the typical physical training group, we observed improved mitochondrial function (T-c decreased 2.4 +/- 4.6 seconds; Cohen's d = -0.51); whereas, mitochondrial function decreased in HIT (T-c increased 2.4 +/- 4.6 seconds; d = 0.50). HIT sustained fitness despite the short duration and reduced volume of activity. A program that includes HIT as part of a larger program may be well suited for maintaining fitness in moderately trained armed forces personnel without access to equipment.
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public health,peer reviewed,military medicine
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