| Literature DB >> 31430880 |
Scott N Drum1, Ludwig Rappelt2, Lars Donath2.
Abstract
Trunk muscle fatigue and its negative relationship with running economy (RE) is frequently recognized by practitioners but lacks evidence-based support. Thus, this three-armed randomized controlled crossover pilot trial (RCT) examined the effects of trunk and upper body fatigue protocols on RE, trunk muscle isometric rate of force production, and lactate response in runners. Seven well-trained runners (2 males and 5 females) randomly underwent control (CON), trunk fatigue (TRK), and upper body fatigue (UPR) protocols on three different lab visits. Both workload-matched fatigue protocols-consisting of 24 min of a circuit weight routine-elicited comparable rates of perceived exertion, heart rate responses, and lactate accumulations. As expected, core muscle strength assessed with isometric testing immediately before and after both fatigue protocols, decreased notably. RE (VO2/kg bodyweight averaged for 1 min) was determined during a 15 min individual anaerobic threshold (IAT) run at 4, 9 and 14 min. The IAT (13.9 to 15.8 km/h) was determined on lab visit one using an incremental treadmill running protocol to volitional exhaustion. RE differed, although not significantly, between CON and both fatigue protocols by 0.75 (4th min) to 1.5 ml/min/kg (9th and 14th min) bodyweight (Time × Mode Interaction: p = 0.2, np2 = 0.40) with a moderate to large effect size. Despite no signficance, the largest RE differences were observed between TRK and CON (and underscored by the moderate to large effect size). This preliminary pilot RCT revealed that both UPR and TRK conditions might adversely impact running economy at a high intensity, steady state running pace. Future studies should elucidate if these findings are replicable in large scale trials and, in turn, whether periodized core training can beneficially preserve RE.Entities:
Keywords: endurance; fatigue; lactate; oxygen uptake; running economy; trunk strength
Year: 2019 PMID: 31430880 PMCID: PMC6722636 DOI: 10.3390/sports7080195
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4663
Physiological characteristics of participants during incremental treadmill protocol to assess VO2max and IAT.
| Group | VO2max | RPE | HRmax | VE/VO2 | BR | IPE [La] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ml·kg−1·min−1 | Borg, 6–20 | beats·min−1 | no units | breaths·min−1 | mmol·L−1 | |
| Males (n = 2) | 67.4 (3.3) | 20 (0.0) | 189.0 (7.8) | 26.3 (1.63) | 52.8 (7.7) | 14.0 (5.2) |
| Females (n = 5) | 59.7 (5.4) | 19.8 (0.5) | 185.3 (6.1) | 28.0 (4.12) | 51.6 (7.0) | 10.1 (2.4) |
| Combined (n = 7) | 61.9 (5.9) | 19.9 (0.4) | 186.3 (6.12) | 27.5 (3.5) | 51.9 (6.5) | 11.2 (3.4) |
Date presented as mean ± (SD). IPE = immediate post-exercise. VO2max = maximal oxygen uptake. RPE = rating of perceived exertion. HRmax = heart rate maximum. VE/VO2 = ventilatory equivalent of oxygen. BR = breathing rate. [La] = blood lactate accumulation.
Physiological observations during trunk and upper body fatigue protocols.
| Condition | IPE RPE | IPE HR | IPE [La] |
|---|---|---|---|
| Borg, 6–20 | beats·min−1 | mmol·L−1 | |
| TRK (n = 7) | 17.4 (1.6) | 128.0 (17.5) | 2.9 (1.9) |
| UPR (n = 7) | 19.0 (1.6) | 114.0 (28.6) | 3.5 (1.7) |
Date presented as mean ± (SD). IPE = immediate post-exercise. RPE = rating of perceived exertion. HR = heart rate. [La] = blood lactate accumulation (note, resting values, prior to the fatigue protocol, were 1.1 mmol·L−1 for both conditions).
Maximal trunk strength for twist right, abdominal flex and back extension at pre- and post-testing during TRK and UPR conditions.
| Trunk Exercise | TRK | UPR | ηp² | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Twist, right [N] | 1650 (380) | 1556 (380) | 1603 (350) | 1598 (330) |
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| Abdominal Flexion [N] | 692 (182) | 595 (133) * | 673 (186) | 646 (158) | 0.064 |
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| Back extension [N] | 1492 (319) | 1252 (200) * | 1404 (297) | 1360 (204) | 0.110 |
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Data are presented as means with standard deviations (SD). Time × Condition interaction effects are presented as p-values and eta-square. Large effects and statistically significant effects are highlighted in bold. Post-hoc tests are indicated with p < 0.05 *.
Figure 1Relative running economy VO2 (mL/kg/min) at individual anaerobic threshold (IAT) velocity at 5, 10 and 15 min (i.e., VO2 averaged across 4–5, 9–10, and 14–15 min at IAT). Ṩ = small to moderate effect size; ṨṨ = large effect size. No statistically significant differences found between conditions.