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LONG-TERM EFFECT OF PREVIOUS SWIMTRAINING IN GIRLS. A 10-YEAR FOLLOW-UP OF THE "GIRL SWIMMERS"
Authors:B. O. ERIKSSON,I. ENGSTRÖ  M,P. KARLBERG,A. LUNDIN,B. SALTIN,C. THORÉ  N
Affiliation:Department of Paediatrics, University of Göteborg, and the Departments of Paediatrics, Karolinska Institutet, St. Göran's Hospital and Karolinska Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden
Abstract:ABSTRACT. Thirty girls, studied in 1961 after 2.5 years of intensive swimtraining, were the subject of a follow-up for ten years. When last examined, seven and ten years after the original study, all the girls had given up swimtraining. The increased values for vital capacity observed in 1961 remained unchanged, but residual volume, functional residual capacity and total lung capacity showed small increases even after corrections for body growth. Such increases are, however, normal in these years. Heart volume which was high originally, was found to be lower ten years later, although mean values were still higher than normal. The decrease seen from 1961 to 1971 could mainly be ascribed to a decrease in the subjects with the largest hearts originally. Both total hemoglobin and blood volume decreased to normal values in relation to body size. Maximal oxygen uptake, though, fell from 2.80 1/min (51.4 ml/kg × min) to 2.18 1/min (36.4 ml/kg × min) ten years later. It is suggested that the functional capacity of the cardiovascular system declined more markedly than its dimensions.
Keywords:Blood lactate concentration    blood volume    girl swimmers    growth    heart volume    lung volumes    maximal oxygen uptake    physical training    total hemoglobin
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