Critical determinants of combined sprint and endurance performance: an integrative analysis from muscle fiber to the human body.

FASEB JOURNAL(2018)

引用 53|浏览19
暂无评分
摘要
Optimizing physical performance is a major goal in current physiology. However, basic understanding of combining high sprint and endurance performance is currently lacking. This study identifies critical determinants of combined sprint and endurance performance using multiple regression analyses of physiologic determinants at different biologic levels. Cyclists, including 6 international sprint, 8 team pursuit, and 14 road cyclists, completed a Wingate test and 15-km time trial to obtain sprint and endurance performance results, respectively. Performance was normalized to lean body mass(2/3) to eliminate the influence of body size. Performance determinants were obtained from whole-body oxygen consumption, blood sampling, knee-extensor maximal force, muscle oxygenation, whole-muscle morphology, and muscle fiber histochemistry of musculus vastus lateralis. Normalized sprint performance was explained by percentage of fast-type fibers and muscle volume (R-2 = 0.65; P < 0.001) and normalized endurance performance by performance oxygen consumption (V.o(2)), mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration, and muscle oxygenation (R-2 = 0.92; P < 0.001). Combined sprint and endurance performance was explained by gross efficiency, performance V.o(2), and likely by muscle volume and fascicle length (P = 0.056; P = 0.059). High performance V.o(2) related to a high oxidative capacity, high capillarization x myoglobin, and small physiologic cross-sectional area (R-2 = 0.67; P < 0.001). Results suggest that fascicle length and capillarization are important targets for training to optimize sprint and endurance performance simultaneously.
更多
查看译文
关键词
skeletal muscle,oxidative capacity,oxygen transport,muscle architecture,muscle biopsy
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要