首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
检索        


Aerobic capacity in speed‐power athletes aged 20–90 years vs endurance runners and untrained participants
Authors:K Kusy  J Zieliński
Institution:Department of Athletics, Eugeniusz Piasecki University School of Physical Education, , Poznań, Poland
Abstract:We studied relationships between age and aerobic capacity in three groups of subjects adhering to different exercise modalities. A total of 203 men aged 20–90 years were examined: 52 speed‐power track and field athletes (SP), 89 endurance runners (ER) and 62 untrained individuals (UT). Maximal exercise characteristics were obtained during a graded treadmill test until exhaustion: oxygen uptake (urn:x-wiley:09057188:media:sms1496:sms1496-math-5001), heart rate (HRmax), oxygen pulse (O2 Pulsemax) and maximal distance (Distmax). Information about training history and weekly training amount was collected. A linear model of regression was adopted. urn:x-wiley:09057188:media:sms1496:sms1496-math-5002 in SP was lower than in ER, but significantly higher than in UT. The cross‐sectional rates of decline in body mass‐adjusted urn:x-wiley:09057188:media:sms1496:sms1496-math-5003 and Distmax were significantly smaller in SP than in ER and UT. About 80 years of age, the levels of urn:x-wiley:09057188:media:sms1496:sms1496-math-5004 and Distmax reached similar values in SP and ER. The decline in HRmax, but not in O2 Pulsemax was suggested as a cardiac adaptation accounting for between‐group differences in urn:x-wiley:09057188:media:sms1496:sms1496-math-5005 loss. Weekly training volume was a significant positive predictor of age‐related changes in aerobic capacity. In conclusion, not only endurance, but also speed‐power exercise appears adequate to ensure an elevated aerobic capacity at old age.
Keywords:oxygen uptake  lifelong physical activity  master athletes
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号