Oxygen uptake plateau occurrence depends on oxygen kinetics and oxygen deficit accumulation |
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Authors: | Max Niemeyer Renate Leithaeuser Ralph Beneke |
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Abstract: | We tested the hypothesis that participants with an oxygen uptake () plateau during incremental exercise exhibit a lower VO2‐deficit (VO2DEF)‐accumulation in the submaximal intensity domain due to faster ramp and square wave O2‐kinetics. Twenty‐six male participants performed a standard ramp test (increment: 30 W·min?1), a ramp test with an individualized ramp slope and a two‐step (moderate and severe) square wave exercise followed by a ‐verification bout. VO2DEF was calculated by the difference between individualized ramp test O2 and O2‐demand estimated from steady‐state O2‐kinetics. Twenty‐four participants verified their O2max in the verification test. Ten of them showed a plateau in the individualized ramp test. VO2DEF at the end of this ramp test (4.34 ± 0.60 vs 4.54 ± 0.43 L) was not different between the plateau and the non‐plateau group (P > 0.05). The plateau group had a significantly (P < 0.05) lower VO2DEF 2 minutes before termination of the individualized ramp test (2.24 ± 0.40 vs 2.78 ± 0.33 L). This coincided with a shorter mean response time (43 ± 9 vs 53 ± 7 seconds), a higher increase in O2 per W (10.1 ± 0.2 vs 9.2 ± 0.5 mL·min?1·W?1) at the individualized ramp test as well as shorter time constants of moderate (36 ± 6 vs 48 ± 7 seconds) and severe (62 ± 9 vs 86 ± 10 seconds) square wave kinetics (all P < 0.05). We conclude that the O2‐plateau occurrence requires a fast O2‐kinetics and a low VO2DEF‐accumulation at intensities below O2max. |
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Keywords: | anaerobic cardiorespiratory fitness endurance exercise testing levelling‐off |
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