- Title
- Monitoring athletic training status using the maximal rate of heart rate increase
- Creator
- Bellenger, Clint R.; Thomson, Rebecca L.; Howe, Peter R. C.; Karavirta, Laura; Buckley, Jonathan D.
- Relation
- Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport Vol. 19, Issue 7, p. 590-595
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jsams.2015.07.006
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2016
- Description
- Objectives: Reductions in maximal rate of heart rate increase (rHRI) correlate with performance reductions when training load is increased. This study evaluated whether rHRI tracked performance changes across a range of training states. Design: Prospective intervention. Methods: rHRI was assessed during five min of cycling at 100 W (rHRIcyc) and running at 8 km/h (rHRIrun) in 13 male triathletes following two weeks of light-training (LT), two weeks of heavy-training (HT) and a two-day recovery period (RP). A five min cycling time-trial assessed performance and peak oxygen consumption (VO2peak). Results: Performance likely decreased following HT (Effect size ± 90% confidence interval = -0.18 ± 0.09), then very likely increased following RP (0.32 ± 0.14). rHRIcyc very likely decreased (-0.48 ± 0.24), and rHRIrun possibly decreased (-0.33 ± 0.48), following HT. Changes in both measures were unclear following RP. Steady-state HR was almost certainly lower (-0.81 ± 0.31) during rHRIcyc than rHRIrun. A large correlation was found between reductions in performance and rHRIrun (r ± 90%; CI = 0.65 ± 0.34) from LT to HT, but was unclear for rHRIcyc. Trivial within-subject correlations were found between rHRI and performance, but the strength of relationship between rHRIrun and performance was largely associated with VO2peak following LT (r = -0.58 ± 0.38). Conclusions: Performance reductions were most sensitively tracked by rHRIrun following HT. This may be due to rHRIrun being assessed at a higher intensity than rHRIcyc, inferred from a higher steady-state HR and supported by a stronger within-subject relationship between rHRIrun and performance in individuals with a lower VO2peak, in whom the same exercise intensity would represent a greater physiological stress. rHRI assessed at relatively high exercise intensities may better track performance changes.
- Subject
- heart rate; overreaching; athletic performance; autonomic nervous system
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1339565
- Identifier
- uon:28286
- Identifier
- ISSN:1440-2440
- Language
- eng
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