| Literature DB >> 29225481 |
Bert Bond1, Kathryn L Weston2, Craig A Williams1, Alan R Barker1.
Abstract
Physical activity lowers future cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk; however, few children and adolescents achieve the recommended minimum amount of daily activity. Accordingly, there is virtue in identifying the efficacy of small volumes of high-intensity exercise for health benefits in children and adolescents for the primary prevention of CVD risk. The purpose of this narrative review is to provide a novel overview of the available literature concerning high-intensity interval-exercise (HIIE) interventions in children and adolescents. Specifically, the following areas are addressed: 1) outlining the health benefits observed following a single bout of HIIE, 2) reviewing the role of HIIE training in the management of pediatric obesity, and 3) discussing the effectiveness of school-based HIIE training. In total, 39 HIIE intervention studies were included in this review. Based upon the available data, a single bout of high-intensity exercise provides a potent stimulus for favorable, acute changes across a range of cardiometabolic outcomes that are often superior to a comparative bout of moderate-intensity exercise (14 studies reviewed). HIIE also promotes improvements in cardiorespiratory fitness and cardiometabolic health status in overweight and obese children and adolescents (10 studies reviewed) and when delivered in the school setting (15 studies reviewed). We thus conclude that high-intensity exercise is a feasible and potent method of improving a range of cardiometabolic outcomes in children and adolescents. However, further work is needed to optimize the delivery of HIIE interventions in terms of participant enjoyment and acceptability, to include a wider range of health outcomes, and to control for important confounding variables (eg, changes in diet and habitual physical activity). Finally, research into the application of HIIE training interventions to children and adolescents of different ages, sexes, pubertal status, and sociocultural backgrounds is required.Entities:
Keywords: cardiometabolic disease; pediatric; primary prevention; vigorous physical activity
Year: 2017 PMID: 29225481 PMCID: PMC5708187 DOI: 10.2147/OAJSM.S127395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Access J Sports Med ISSN: 1179-1543
Acute bouts of high-intensity interval exercise and health outcomes in children and adolescents
| Study | Participants | Design and conditions | Outcome
| ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blood pressure | TAG | Insulin/glucose | Vascular function | Other | |||
| Barrett et al | n=10, all males, 15.3±0.1 years | Between-measure design 4×15-min treadmill walking at 59% VO2peak vs control | 14% ↓ in TAUC-TAG vs control. No difference in IAUC-TAG | No effect on TAUC glucose or IAUC glucose | |||
| n=9, all males, 15.4±0.1 years | 4×18-min intermittent shuttle running at 69% VO2peak vs control | 26% ↓ in TAUC-TAG and 47% ↓ in IAUC-TAG vs control | No effect on TAUC glucose or IAUC glucose | ||||
| Burns et al | n=10, seven males, three females, 17.2±0.7 years | Two × 30 s sprint cycling vs control | 5% ↓ in SBP 90 min postexercise | No effect of fat oxidation 90 min postexercise | |||
| Bond et al | n=20, 10 males, 10 females, 14.3±0.3 years | Within-measure design | 3% ↓ postprandial AUC for SBP after HIIE vs control and 3% ↓ after AEE vs control, with no difference between HIIE and AEE | No effect on TAUC-TAG | No effect on TAUC glucose or IAUC glucose | TAUC fat oxidation 23% ↑ after HIIE vs control and 16% ↑ after AEE vs control, but no difference between HIIE and AEE | |
| HIIE vs AEE vs control | In girls only, IAUC-TAG 38% ↓ after HIIE vs control and 34% ↓ after AEE vs control, but no difference between HIIE and AEE | ||||||
| HIIE: 8×1 min at 90% PP with 75 s recovery | HIIE perceived to be more enjoyable | ||||||
| Bond et al | n=19, nine males, 10 females, 13.7±0.4 years | Within-measure design | TAUC-SBP 3% ↓ in HIIE vs control only | No effect on TAUC-TAG or IAUC-TAG | TAUC glucose 3% ↓ in HIIE vs control and 2% ↓ vs AEE; no difference in AEE vs control | TAUC fat oxidation 17% ↑ in HIIE vs control and 11% ↑ vs AEE; no difference in AEE vs control | |
| Accumulated the same HIIE and AEE protocol as above | HIIE perceived to be more enjoyable | ||||||
| Bond et al | n=20, 10 males, 10 females, 14.1±0.3 years | Within-measure design | FMD ↓ immediately post-HIIE, but not AEE, FMD then ↑ from 8.7% to 11.8% 2 hours post-HIIE; no difference in FMD post-MIIE | HIIE perceived to be more enjoyable | |||
| HIIE vs AEE described by Bond et al | Peak and total reactive hyperemia ↑ post-AEE and HIIE, but always greater in HIIE | ||||||
| Bond et al | n=20, 10 males, 10 females, 14.3±0.3 years | Within-measure design | No effect on TAUC-TAG or IAUC-TAG | No difference in FMD after AEE, although AEE completely prevented ↓ in FMD after high-fat meal | No effect of HIIE or AEE on total antioxidant status | ||
| HIIE vs AEE vs control as described by Bond et al | HIIE perceived to be more enjoyable | ||||||
| Chuensiri | n=18 lean, n=17 obese, all males, 10.2±0.2 years | Within-measure design | Only HIIE at 170% ↑ FMD (both groups)( | ||||
| HIIE: eight sets of 20 s at 100%, 130%, and 170% VO2peak | Arterial stiffness ↓ after 130% and 170% (but not 100%) VO2peak | ||||||
| There was no interaction effect of body-mass index | |||||||
| Cockcroft | n=9, all males, 14.2±0.4 years | Within-measure design | TAUC-glucose 8% ↓ in HIIE vs control and 6% ↓ in AEE vs control | HIIE ↑ postprandial fat oxidation vs control | |||
| HIIE vs AEE vs control as described by Bond et al | IAUC glucose 29% ↓ in HIIE vs control and 24% ↓ in AEE vs contro | No differences in fat oxidation in AEE vs control or between HIIE vs AEE | |||||
| TAUC insulin 13% ↓ HIIE vs control and 12% ↓ after AEE vs control | No changes in postprandial energy expenditure between trials | ||||||
| IAUC insulin 24% ↓ after HIIE vs control and 29% ↓ after AEE vs control | HIIE and AEE were equally as enjoyable | ||||||
| Insulin sensitivity | |||||||
| No differences between HIIE and AEE for these outcomes | |||||||
| Cockcroft et al | n=11, all males, 8.8±0.8 years | Within-measure design | Insulin sensitivity | HIIE ↑ postprandial fat oxidation by 38.9% vs control No differences in fat oxidation in AEE vs control or between HIIE vs AEE | |||
| HIIE vs AEE vs control as described by Bond et al | HIIE perceived to be more enjoyable than AEE | ||||||
| Crisp et al | n=11 overweight, all males, 11.1±1.3 years | Within-measure design | No difference in fat oxidation 30 min postexercise | ||||
| 30 min cycling at Fatmax (AEE) vs 30 min cycling at Fatmax with 4 s sprints every 2 min (SI) | Energy expenditure during and 30 min postexercise 23% ↑ in SI, and not compensated by increased ad libitum energy intake | ||||||
| Participants enjoyed SI more than AEE | |||||||
| Sedgwick et al | n=9, all males, 13.1±0.6 years, n=6 dropped out | Within-measure design | 13% ↓ in TAUC-TAG the day after SI 15% ↓ in IAUC-TAG the day after SI | No effect on TAUC glucose or TAUC insulin | No change in fasted FMD the day after SI; however, SI prevented ↓ in FMD observed in control after a high-fat breakfast (−20%) | ||
| SI (four blocks of 10×6 s max cycling, interspersed by 90 s passive rest) vs control the day before a high-fat breakfast and lunch | |||||||
| Thackray et al | n=15, all males, 11.8±0.4 years | Within-measure design | 10% ↓ in TAUC-TAG the day after HIIE | No effect on TAUC glucose or TAUC insulin | |||
| HIIE (10×1 min at 100% maximal aerobic speed, interspersed by 1 min active recovery) vs control the day before a high-fat meal | |||||||
| Thackray et al | n=16, all females, 12.1±0.7 years, n=3 dropped out | HIIE (10×1 min at 100% maximal aerobic speed, interspersed by 1 min active recovery) vs control the day before a high-fat meal vs 5×1 min at 100% maximal aerobic speed with energy-intake restriction (HIIE-ER) | ↓ TAUC-TAG 10% in HIIE, and 9% in HIIE-ER compared to control | ↑ TAUC glucose 4% in HIIE compared to control, but no difference between HIIE-ER and control or between HIIE and HIIE-ER | HIIE ↑ fat oxidation by 9% compared to control, with no differences between HIIE-ER and control or between HIIE and HIIE-ER | ||
| No difference between HIIE and HIIE-ER for TAUC-TAG | No difference across conditions for IAUC glucose | ||||||
| No difference across conditions for IAUC-TAG | |||||||
| Tolfrey et al | n=8, all male, 13±0.3 years | Within-measure design | ↓ TAUC-TAG 20% and ↓ IAUC-TAG 35% in HIIE compared to control | No effect on TAUC- or IAUC-glucose across trials | |||
| HIIE (6×10 min running at 75% VO2peak) vs AEE (6×10 min running at 53% VO2peak) vs control | ↓ TAUC-TAG 24% and ↓ IAUC-TAG 44% in AEE compared to control | ||||||
| No difference between HIIE and AEE for TAUC- or IAUC-TAG | |||||||
Notes:
Indicates relative change expressed as a percentage from baseline FMD measure.
Abbreviations: GET, gas-exchange threshold; Fatmax, exercise intensity corresponding to greatest rate of fat oxidation; FMD, flow-mediated dilation; HIIE, high-intensity interval exercise; IAUC, incremental area under curve; MIIE, moderate-intensity interval exercise; AEE, aerobic endurance exercise; OGTT, oral glucose-tolerance test; PRH, peak reactive hyperemia; SBP, systolic blood pressure; SI, sprint interval; TAUC, total AUC; TAG, triacylglycerol; VO2peak, peak oxygen uptake.
Characteristics for high-intensity interval-exercise training studies in overweight and obese children and adolescents
| Study | Condition | Participants | Modality | Intensity | Bouts | Session duration | Session frequency (times/week) | Length (weeks) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| de Araujo et al | HIIE | n=15, 10 males, five females, 10.7±0.7 years obese | Treadmill running (both) | 100% MAS | n=3–6 | 12–24 min | 2 | 12 |
| AEE | n=15, 11 males, four females, 10.4±0.7 years obese | 80% peak HR | Continuous | 30–60 min | 2 | 12 | ||
| Kargarfard et al | HIIE | n=10, 12.3±1.3 years obese, ? males, ? females | Treadmill running (all) | 60%–90% HR reserve (5% increase every 2 weeks) | Until exhaustion | 50–60 min (all) | 3 | 8 |
| AEE | n=10, 12.3±1.3 years obese, ? males, ? females | 60%–95% HR reserve (5% increase every 2 weeks) | Continuous | 5 | 8 | |||
| Control | n=10, 12.3±1.3 years obese, ? males, ? females | |||||||
| Koubaa et al | HIIE | n=14, all males, 13±0.8 years obese | Running (both) | 80% VO2peak (5% increase every 4 weeks) | n=? | ? | 3 | 12 |
| AEE | n=15, all males, 12.9±0.5 years obese | 60%–70% VO2peak (5% increase every 4 weeks) | Continuous | 30–40 min | 3 | |||
| Lau et al | HIIE1 | n=15, ? males, ? females, 11±0.6 years overweight | Running (all) | 120% MAS | n=12 | 6 min | 3 | 6 |
| HIIE2 | n=21, ? males, ? females, 9.9±0.9 years overweight | 100% MAS | n=16 | 8 min | 3 | 6 | ||
| Control | n=12, ? males, ? females, 10.6±0.6 years overweight | |||||||
| Lazzer et al | HIIE | n=10, all males, 16.8±0.7 years obese | Running (all) | HR at 100% VO2peak | n=6 | 37±3 min | 10 | 3 |
| AEE1 | n=9, all males, 16.1±1.1 years obese | HR at 70% VO2peak | Continuous | 31±4 min | 10 | 3 | ||
| AEE2 | n=11, all males, 16.4±1.1 years obese | HR at 40% VO2peak | Continuous | 45±6 min | 10 | 3 | ||
| Murphy et al | HIIE | n=7, two males, five females, 13.7±2.0 years obese | ? (both) | 80%–90% HRmax | n=10 | 30 min (both) | 3 | 4 |
| AEE | n=6, one male, five females, 14.3±1.2 years obese | 65% estimated maximal capacity | Continuous | 3 | 4 | |||
| Racil et al | HIIE | n=11, all females, 15.6±0.7 years obese | Running on athletics track (all) | 100%–110% MAS | n=12–16 | 12–16 min | 3 | 12 |
| AEE | n=11, all females, 16.3±0.5 years obese | 70%–80% MAS | n=12–16 | 12–16 min | 3 | 12 | ||
| Control | n=12, all females, 15.9±1.2 years obese | |||||||
| Racil et al | HIIE | n=17, all females, 14.2±1.2 years obese | Running on an athletics track (all) | 100% MAS | n=8–16 | 12–24 min | 3 | 12 |
| AEE | n=16, all females, 14.2±1.2 years obese | 80% MAS | n=8–16 | 12–24 min | 3 | 12 | ||
| Control | n=14, all females, 14.2±1.2 years obese | |||||||
| Starkoff et al | HIIE | n=14, ? males, ? females, 14.9±1.6 years obese | Cycle ergometer (both) | 90%–95% age-predicted HRmax | n=10 | 30 min | 3 | 6 |
| AEE | n=13, ? males, ? females, 14.5±1.4 years obese | 65%–70% age-predicted HRmax | Continuous | 30 min | 3 | 6 | ||
| Tjonna et al | HIIE | n=28, 14 males, 14 females, 13.9±0.3 years overweight | Running “uphill” on a treadmill | 90%–95% HRmax | n= 4 | 25 min | 2 | 12 |
| Control | n=26, 14 males, 12 females, 14.2±0.3 years overweight | Multicomponent treatment |
Notes: ?, Data not reported. Session durations exclude warm-up or cool-down.
Abbreviations: AEE, aerobic endurance training; HIIE, high-intensity interval exercise; HR, heart rate; MAS, maximal aerobic speed; R, recovery interval; VO2peak, peak oxygen uptake; W, work interval.
High-intensity interval-exercise training and health outcomes in overweight and obese children and adolescents
| Study | Condition | Body size and composition (Δ%)
| Blood markers (Δ%)
| Blood pressure (Δ%)
| Fitness (Δ%)
| Notes | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BW | BMI | BF | Ins | Glu | HDL-C | LDL-C | TAG | SBP | DBP | CRF | |||
| de Araujo et al | HIIE | ↓2.7 | ↓6.3 | ↓2.6 | ↓29 | ↓3.3 | ↑7 | ↑2 | ↓9.7 | ↓7.8 | ↓6 | ↑15 | BF (%) via BIA |
| AEE | ↓1.5 | ↓3.3 | ↓2.7 | ↓27 | ↓4.3 | ↑7 | ↑9.4 | ↔0 | ↔0 | ↓7.6 | ↑13 | CRF via CPET | |
| Kargarfard et al | HIIE | ↓4.3 | ↓4.3 | ↓8.4 | ↓16 | ↑23 | CRF via CPET | ||||||
| AEE | ↓1.9 | ↓2 | ↓5.9 | ↓15 | ↑18 | ||||||||
| Control | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? | ||||||||
| Koubaa et al | HIIE | ↓2.5 | ↓2.6 | ↓5.9 | ↑4 | ↓1.5 | ↓5.9 | ↓2.2 | ↓3.4 | ↑10.9 | BF (%) via skin folds | ||
| AEE | ↓6.1 | ↓7.5 | ↓15 | ↑16 | ↓5.9 | ↓5.1 | ↓1.5 | ↓2.4 | ↑4.5 | CRF via CPET | |||
| Lau et al | HIIE1 | ↑2.3 | ↑1.1 | ↓12 | ↑21 | BF (mm) as sum of skin folds | |||||||
| HIIE2 | ↑1.5 | ↑0.4 | ↓0.5 | ↑10 | CRF via yo-yo intermittent endurance test | ||||||||
| Control | ↑2.4 | ↑1.6 | ↑8 | ↓7.2 | |||||||||
| Lazzer et al | HIIE | ↓4.5 | ↓4.6 | ↓5.8 | ↑15 | CRF via CPET and normalized for FFM | |||||||
| AEE1 | ↓5.4 | ↓5.6 | ↓6.3 | ↑18 | BF (kg) via BIA | ||||||||
| AEE2 | ↓7.4 | ↓7.5 | ↓10 | ↑7.7 | BF (%) did not change significantly | ||||||||
| Murphy et al | HIIE | ↑0.3 | ↑1.1 | ↑12 | BF (%) via BIA | ||||||||
| AEE | ↔0 | ↑4.5 | ↑13 | CRF was via CPET | |||||||||
| Racil et al | HIIE | ↓3.8 | ↓14 | ↓7.8 | ↓27 | ↓2.2 | ↑5.9 | ↓12 | ↓7.1 | ↑7.6 | BMI as | ||
| AEE | ↓2 | ↓9.7 | ↓5.2 | ↓18 | ↓2.2 | ↑7.9 | ↓7.9 | ↓2.2 | ↑5.1 | BF (%) via BIA | |||
| Control | ↓0.6 | ↔0 | ↓1.1 | ↓4.1 | ↓2.1 | ↑1 | ↓0.8 | ↓2.4 | ↑1.3 | CRF measured during field-based test | |||
| Racil et al | HIIE | ↓3.7 | ↓8.8 | ↓9.7 | ↓26 | ↓4.2 | ↓4.5 | ↓7.2 | ↑2.2 | BMI as | |||
| AEE | ↓1.9 | ↓7.7 | ↓8.4 | ↓19 | ↓4 | ↓3.5 | ↓5.8 | ↑3.6 | BF (%) via BIA | ||||
| Control | ↑0.4 | ↔0 | ↓1.3 | ↓3.8 | ↓0.9 | ↓0.2 | ↓2 | ↑1.7 | CRF expressed in absolute terms and measured during field-based test | ||||
| Starkoff et al | HIIE | ↑0.2 | ↑0.4 | ↓1.6 | ↑14 | BF (%) via BodPoD | |||||||
| AEE | ↑1.3 | ↑0.5 | ↓0.5 | ↑0.5 | CRF estimated via submaximal test | ||||||||
| Tjonna et al | HIIE | ↑0.3 | ↓2.1 | ↓3.2 | ↓29 | ↓5.8 | ↑9.7 | ↓11 | ↓7.3 | ↓7.8 | ↑9.3 | BF (%) via DXA | |
| Control | ↑1.2 | ↓0.6 | ↓0.7 | ↓19 | ↓2 | ↓7.3 | ↓8.8 | ↓2 | ↑2.7 | ↔0 | CRF via CPET | ||
Notes:
Significant within-condition effect; ?, data not reported. CRF expressed as oxygen uptake normalized for body mass unless stated otherwise.
Abbreviations: AEE, aerobic endurance exercise; BIA, bioelectrical impedance; BF, body fat; BMI, body mass index; BW, body weight; CPET, cardiopulmonary exercise test; CRF, cardiorespiratory fitness; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; DXA, dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry; Glu, glucose; HDL-C, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol; HIIE, high-intensity interval exercise; ins, insulin; LDL-C, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; SBP, systolic blood pressure; TAG, triacylglycerol.
Characteristics for high-intensity interval-exercise training studies conducted in the school setting
| Study | Condition | Participants | Modality | Intensity | Bouts | Session duration | Session frequency (times/week) | Length (weeks) | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baquet et al | HIIE | n=543, 260 males, 243 females, 11–16 years | Running | 100%–120% of MAS | n=10 | 25–33 min | 1 | 10 | CRF, BW, %BF, BMI |
| Control | n=48, 27 males, 21 females, 11–16 years | ||||||||
| Baquet et al | HIIE | n=47, 21 males, 26 | Running | 100%–130% of | n=5–10 | 30 min | 2 | 7 | CRF, BW, %BF |
| Control | n=53, 25 males, 28 females, 9.8±0.6 years | Continued normal PE lessons | |||||||
| Baquet et al | HIIE | n=33, 13 males, 20 females, 9.5±0.9 years | Running | 100%–130% of MAS | n=5–10 | 30 min | 2 | 7 | CRF, BW |
| Control | n=20, 10 males, 10 females, 9.9±0.4 years | No information provided | |||||||
| Baquet et al | HIIE | n=22, 11 males, 11 females, 10.0±9.5 years | Running | 100%–190% of MAS | n=5–10 | 25–35 min | 3 | 7 | CRF, BW, BMI |
| AEE | n=22, 12 males, 10 females, 9.3±0.9 years | Running | 80%–85% of MAS | 18–39 min | 3 | 7 | |||
| Control | n=19, 9 males, 10 females, 9.8±1.2 years | Continued normal PE lessons | |||||||
| Boddy et al | HIIE | n=8, all females, 11.8±0.3 years | Dance | >80% HRmax | n=6 | 7.5 min | 3 | 3 | CRF, BW, %BF, BMI, WC, BP |
| Control | n=8, all females, 11.8±0.3 years | No information provided | |||||||
| Boer et al | HIIE | n=17, 11 males, six females, 18±3.2 years | Cycling | 100%–110% VT | n=10 | 30 min | 2 | 15 | CRF, BW, %BF, WC, TAG, HDL-C, Glu |
| AEE | n=15, 10 males, five females, 16.7±3.6 years | Cycling, running, and stepping | 100%–110% VT | 30 min | 2 | 15 | |||
| Control | n=14, nine males, five females, 17.4±2.4 years | Continued usual everyday scholar activities | |||||||
| Bond et al | HIIE | n=13, seven males, six females, 13–15 years | Cycling | 90% PP | n=8–10 | 18–20 min | 3 | 2 | CRF, BP, TAG, HDL-C, Glu |
| Buchan et al | HIIE | n=17, 15 males, two females, 16.7±0.1 years | Running | Maximal (sprint) | n=4–6 | 4–6 min | 3 | 7 | CRF, BW, %BF, BMI BP, TAG, HDL-C, Glu |
| AEE | n=16, 12 males, four females, 16.2±0.1 years | Running | 70% VO2peak | 20 min | 3 | 7 | |||
| Control | n=24, 20 males, four females, 16.3±0.5 years | Instructed to maintain normal physical activity patterns | |||||||
| Buchan et al | HIIE | n=42, 30 males, 12 females, 16.8±0.5 years | Running | Maximal (sprint) | n=4–6 | 4–6 min | 3 | 7 | CRF, BW, BMI BP, TAG, HDL-C, Glu |
| Control | n=47, 34 males, 13 females, 16.6±0.6 years | Instructed to maintain normal physical activity patterns | |||||||
| Costigan et al | HIIE | n=21, 16 males, five females, 15.7±0.7 years | Cardiorespiratory exercises requiring minimal equipment (eg, shuttle runs, jumping jacks, and skipping) | Monitored via HR | n=8–10 | 8–10 min | 3 | 8 | CRF, BMI, WC |
| HIIE | n=22, 15 males, seven females, 15.5±0.6 years | Cardiorespiratory and body weight-resistance training requiring minimal equipment (eg, body-weight squats, push-ups, hovers) | Monitored via HR | n=8–10 | 8–10 min | 3 | 8 | ||
| Control | n=22, 14 males, eight females, 15.6±0.6 years | Continued regular PE lessons | |||||||
| Lambrick et al | HIIE | n=28, 18 males, 10 females, 9.3±0.9 years | Child-specific games | 93% of peak HRpeak | n=6 | 40 min | 2 | 6 | CRF, BW, %BF, BMI, WC |
| Control | n=27, 14 males, 13 females, 9.3±0.8 years | Continued normal PE lessons | |||||||
| Logan et al | HIIE | n=5, all males, 16±1 years | Choice of rowing machine, cycle ergometer, treadmill, cross-trainer, shuttle runs, box jumps, and noncontact boxing | ≥90% HRmax and RPE ≥18 | n=4 | 2 min | 2 (+ 1 RT) | 8 | CRF, %BF, BMI, BP, Glu |
| HIIE | n=5, all males, 16±1 years | Choice of rowing machine, cycle ergometer, treadmill, cross-trainer, shuttle runs, box jumps, and noncontact boxing | ≥90% HRmax and RPE ≥18 | n=4 | 6 min | 2 (+ 1 RT) | 8 | ||
| HIIE | n=6, all males, 16±1 years | Choice of rowing machine, cycle ergometer, treadmill, cross-trainer, shuttle runs, box jumps and noncontact boxing | ≥90% HRmax and RPE ≥18 | n=4 | 12 min | 2 (+ 1 RT) | 8 | ||
| HIIE | n=5, all males, 16±1 years | Choice of rowing machine, cycle ergometer, treadmill, cross-trainer, shuttle runs, box jumps, and noncontact boxing | ≥90% HRmax and | n=4 | 16 min | 2 (+ 1 RT) | 8 | ||
| HIIE | n=5, all males, 16±1 years | Choice of rowing machine, cycle ergometer, treadmill, cross-trainer, shuttle runs, box jumps and noncontact boxing | ≥90% HRmax and RPE ≥18 | n=4 | 20 min | 2 (+ 1 RT) | 8 | ||
| Martin et al | HIIE | n=20, 13 males, seven females, 16.9±0.4 years | Running | Maximal effort (sprint) | n=4–6 | 4–6 min | 3 | 7 | CRF, BW, BMI, Glu |
| Control | n=23, 18 males, five females, 16.8±0.5 years | Continued normal PE lessons | |||||||
| Nourry et al | HIIE | n=9, six males, three females, 9.7±0.9 years | Running | 100%–130% MAS | n=10 | ~20 min | 2 | 8 | CRF, BW, %BF |
| Control | n=9, five males, four females, 10.3±0.7 years | Continued normal PE lessons | |||||||
| Weston et al | HIIE | n=41, 33 males, eight females, 14.1±0.3 years | Boxing, dance, soccer, and basketball | ≥90% of peak HRmax | n=4–7 | 9–15.75 min | 3 | 10 | CRF, BW, %BF, BMI, WC, TAG, HDL-C, GLU |
| Control | n=60, 30 males, 30 females, 14.1±0.3 years | Continued normal PE lessons |
Notes: Session durations exclude warm-up or cool-down.
Denotes the standard deviation reported in the original manuscript, which is suspected to be an error.
Abbreviations: AEE, aerobic endurance training; BP, blood pressure; %BF, percentage body fat; BMI, body mass index; BW, body weight; CRF, cardiorespiratory fitness; Glu, glucose; HDL-C, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol; HIIE, high-intensity interval exercise; HR, heart rate; HRmax, maximal heart rate; MAS, maximal aerobic speed; PE, physical education; PP, peak power; R, recovery interval; RPE, rating of perceived exertion; RT, resistance training; TAG, triacylglycerol; VO2peak, peak oxygen uptake; VT, ventilatory threshold; W, work interval; WC, waist circumference; W:R, work:rest ratio.