| Literature DB >> 35625417 |
Inés Albertus-Cámara1, Vicente Ferrer-López1, Ignacio Martínez-González-Moro1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The use of normobaric hypoxia can bring benefits to sports performance because it improves haematological parameters and/or physical activity tests. Our objective was to conduct a systematic review so as to analyse the methods used in hypoxia and to detect its effects on middle- and/or long-distance runners.Entities:
Keywords: altitude; endurance runners; normobaric hypoxia; sports performance
Year: 2022 PMID: 35625417 PMCID: PMC9138601 DOI: 10.3390/biology11050689
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biology (Basel) ISSN: 2079-7737
Methodological quality (PEDro scale).
| Name, Year | Scores for Each of the Items | Score | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EC | RA | CA | BC | BS | BT | BA | AF | ITTA | BGC | PEAV | ||
| Brugniaux et al. [ | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | 3/10 |
| Burtscher et al. [ | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | 5/10 |
| Julian et al. [ | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | 7/10 |
| Dufour et al. [ | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 6/10 |
| Hobbins et al. [ | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 7/10 |
| Hoshiwaka et al. [ | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 4/10 |
| Katayama et al. [ | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | 5/10 |
| Katayama et al. [ | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | 4/10 |
| Neya et al. [ | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | 5/10 |
| Robertson et al. [ | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | 5/10 |
| Robertson et al. [ | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 4/10 |
| Uryumtsev et al. [ | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | 3/10 |
EC: Eligibility criteria; RA: Random allocation; CA: Concealed allocation; BC: Baseline comparability; BS: Blind subjects; BT: Blind therapists; BA: Blind assessors; AF: Adequate follow-up; ITTA: Intention-to-treat analysis; BGC: Between-group comparisons; PEAV: Point estimates and variability.
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) diagram of the study screening process for examining the effect of intermittent normobaric hypoxia in runners.
Study characteristics.
| Name, Year |
| Sex | Age | VO2 Max | Duration | Session | Intervention Moment | Sport | Sport Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brugniaux et al., 2006 [ | 11 | M | 23.5 | 63.3 | 18 days | 7 days/week | - | Middle-distance runners | Elite |
| Butscher et al., 2010 [ | 11 | M | 21.8 | 59.65 | 13 weeks | 3 days/week | 2 months after the end of the season | Middle-distance runners | National level |
| Julian et al., 2004 [ | 14 | F | 25 | 4.9625 mL/min | 4 weeks | 5 days/week | - | Middle-and-long-distance runners | National level |
| Dufour et al., 2006 [ | 18 | M | 30.3 | 62.85 | 6 weeks | 2 days/week | - | Long-distance runners | Local athletic teams |
| Hobbins et al., 2019 [ | 19 | M | 33.4 | - | 1 week | 3 days/week | - | - | - |
| Hoshiwaka et al., 2013 [ | 7 | F | 19.6 | - | 1 week | 7 days/week | During the season | Middle-distance runners | Intercollege level |
| Katayama et al., 2004 [ | 15 | M | 22.2 | - | 2 weeks | 7 days/week | 7 weeks before the championship. | Long-distance runners | Intercollege level |
| Katayama et al., 2004 [ | 29 | M | 21.05 | - | CONT1:1 week | 7 days/week | - | Endurance runners | Intercollege level |
| Neya et al., 2007 [ | 25 | M | 20.6 | 60.3 | 31 days | INT1: 7 days/week | - | Middle-and-long-distance runners | Intercollege level |
| Robertson et al., 2010 [ | 17 | M | - | 65.5 | 3 weeks | 4 days/week | Middle-distance runners | - | |
| Robertson et al., 2010 [ | 16 | M | - | 68.75 | 6 weeks | 7 days/week | Middle-and-long-distance runners | Elite | |
| Uryumtsev et al., 2020 [ | 20 | M | 21.5 | - | - | - | - | Middle-distance runners | - |
INT1: Group 1 of intervention; INT2: Group 2 of intervention; CONT1: control group 1; CONT2: control group 2; F: female; M: male.
Characteristics of normobaric hypoxia.
| Name, Year | Exposure Type | Exposure Time | Altitude Simulated/Saturation | Administration | Hypoxia Moment | Other |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brugniaux et al., 2006 [ | INT1: HR (sleeping) | INT1: 14 h/day | HR: (FiO2 = 6 nights at 2500 m/0.174, 12 nights at 3000 m/0.164). | Hypoxic room | - | INT1 and CONT trained at 1200 m normoxia |
| Butscher et al., 2010 [ | INT1: HR (position not described) | 2 h session/3 times per week for 10 weeks | FiO2 = 15%(3200 m)–11% (5500 m) | Hypoxic room | - | - |
| Julian et al., 2004 [ | INT1: HR | 5:5 min during 70 min, 5 times a week. | INT1: FiO2 changed from week 1 to week 4, was: 0.12, 0.11, 0.10, 0.10, respectively. | Hypoxic room | 1–2 h after or before exercise training | - |
| Dufour et al., 2006 [ | INT1: HE. Different each week; 24 to 40 min in treadmill | Week 3 and 6: 24 min/session | INT1: (FiO2 = 14.5%) o 3000 m | Facemask | - | - |
| Hobbins et al., 2019 [ | INT1: HE (4 × 4 min running × 3 min at rest (28 min total hypoxia) | 28 min/session. (2 sesions) | INT1: (FiO2 = 15% o 2700 m) | Facemask | - | - |
| Hoshiwaka et al., 2013 [ | INT1: HR (sleeping) and HE (cyclo-ergometer and treadmill) | HR: 7 h/night (6 nights) | HR: (FiO2 = 16.4% or 2000 m) | HR: hypoxic room | - | - |
| Katayama et al., 2004 [ | INT1: HR | 3 h/session during 14 consecutive days. | INT1: (FiO2 = 12.3%) | Hypoxic tent | - | |
| Katayama et al., 2004 [ | INT1 and CONT1:HR (sitting) | INT1 and CONT1: 3 h/day during 1 week | INT1 and INT2: FiO2= 12.3–12% | Hypoxic tent | - | - |
| Neya et al., 2007 [ | INT1: HR (sleeping) | INT1: 10–12 h during 29 nights. | INT1:3000 m | Hypoxic room | - | - |
| Robertson et al., 2010 [ | INT1: HE (treadmill) | INT1: 4–5 h hypoxia in exercise/week | HE: 2200 m | Hypoxic room | - | - |
| Robertson et al., 2009 [ | INT1: HR (Not described) | INT1:14 h/day | INT1:(FiO2 = 3000 m) | Hypoxic room | - | |
| Uryumtsev et al., 2020 [ | INT1: HR (sitting) | 10:10 min | (FiO2 = 10%) | Facemask | - | - |
INT1: Group 1 of intervention; INT2: Group 2 of intervention; CONT: Control group; HR: Hypoxia at rest; HE: Hypoxia during exercise.
Haematological parameters outcome.
| Name, Year | Maximal Heart Rate or Heart Rate | Hemoglobin Concentration | Percentage of Hematocrit | Lactate Concentration | Percentage of Reticulocytes | Erythropoietin Values | Oxygen Saturation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brugniaux et al., 2006 [ | HRmax: No significant difference between the groups. | ||||||
| Butscher et al., 2010 [ | Significantly increased during the 5th week in comparison to the pre-intervention data, but this improvement did not remain during weeks 8 and 13. There were no significant differences between the groups ( | Significant increase in the intervention group during the 5 weeks of training in comparison with the values obtained before starting the intervention. However, there were no significant changes when comparing the two following measures during weeks 8 and 13 with the values from pre-intervention ( | |||||
| Julian et al., 2004 [ | No significant difference between the groups | No significant differences between the values obtained after the intervention and those obtained pre-intervention ( | No significant changes ( | Significant increase in both groups after 12 days of intervention in comparison to 10 days after finishing ( | The group exposed to hypoxia obtained a significant decrease in comparison to the value before starting ( | ||
| Dufour et al., 2006 [ | HR max: no significant difference between the groups | No significant changes ( | |||||
| Hobbins et al., 2019 [ | Major increase in INT1 ( | Significantly smaller ( | |||||
| Hoshiwaka et al., 2013 [ | HR: values on the 1st night under hypoxia compared with those under normoxia indicated a significant increase after hypoxia ( | Decreased on the first night sleeping in oxygen-poor air conditions and on the sixth night (the last one of intervention), in comparison to the night in normoxia ( | |||||
| Katayama et al., 2004 [ | HR max: no differences between the groups ( | Any significant rise was produced in that measure after the intervention. No significant differences between groups ( | No significant difference in this outcome measure for the INT1 group after the hypoxia, and no significant differences between the groups ( | No significant improvements in favour of INT1 group, and no significant improvements found when comparing this group with the CONT1 group ( | No significant changes in the INT1 group after the exposure and no significant changes between the groups ( | ||
| Katayama et al., 2004 [ | INT2 values increased after the end of the intervention ( | ||||||
| Neya et al., 2007 [ | HR: no significant differences in the INT1 and INT2 after being exposed to hypoxia ( | No significant changes ( | |||||
| Robertson et al., 2010 [ | Compared with INT1, INT2 had substantially higher values at week 1, 2 and 3. | No significant changes ( | INT2 substantially increased during weeks 1 and 3. No data for week 2. INT1 had no substantial changes in percent reticulocytes ( | INT1 had no substantial changes in percent reticulocytes. | |||
| Robertson et al., 2010 [ | INT1 had substantially higher values after block 2 than CONT1. After block 1 the differences were negligible. | Significant increase in INT1 during days 2 and 6 of exposure, both in block 1 and 2. Even so, these effects did not remain during days 20 and 27 in either of the two blocks of the intervention. | |||||
| Uryumtsev et al., 2020 [ | HR: NT1 increased significantly ( | INT1 decreased ( |
INT1: Group 1 of intervention; INT2: Group 2 of intervention; CONT1: Control group; EPO: erythropoietin; HR: heart; IH: intermittent hypoxia; HRmax: maximal heart rate; HR: heart rate.
Sport performance outcome.
| Name, Year | 3000 m-Run: | Time to Exhaustion |
|---|---|---|
| Julian et al., 2004 [ | Did not improve after hypoxia exposure ( | |
| Dufour et al., 2006 [ | Significantly improved ( | |
| Katayama et al., 2004 [ | Improving trend after intervention ( | Significantly improved ( |
| Katayama et al., 2004 [ | ||
| Neya et al., 2007 [ | The groups exposed to hypoxia trend to significance ( |