Relationships between EMG and blood lactate accumulation during incremental exercise in endurance- and speed-trained athletes

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Deutscher übersetzter Titel:Beziehungen zwischen EMG und Blutlaktatanstieg bei stufenfoermiger Belastung bei ausdauer- und schnelligkeitstrainierten Sportlern
Autor:Chwalbinska-Moneta, Jolanta; Hänninen, Osmo; Penttila, Ilkka
Erschienen in:Clinical journal of sport medicine
Veröffentlicht:4 (1994), 1, S. 31-38, Lit.
Format: Literatur (SPOLIT)
Publikationstyp: Zeitschriftenartikel
Medienart: Gedruckte Ressource
Sprache:Englisch
ISSN:1050-642X, 1536-3724
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Erfassungsnummer:PU199507070608
Quelle:BISp

Abstract

The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between the (EMG) of dynamically or statically working and nonworking muscles and blood lactate concentrations during progressive exercise in seven endurance-trained and seven speed-trained male athletes. Blood lactate concentrations during the incremental exercise showed a high correlation with EMG not only in dynamically loaded antagonists and m. soleus, but also in nonworking muscle. No relationship was found between EMG and blood lactate in statically loaded m. trapezius. The nonlinearity in EMG versus the progressively increasing power output curves was observed in dynamically working leg muscles and nonworking m. frontalis, but not in m. trapezius. The nonlinear increase in EMG occurred within the range of exercise intensities corresponding to the individual anaerobic threshold and the anaerobic threshold at the blood lactate level of 4 mmol/l. The EMG treshold for m. soleus, rich in slow-twitch fibers, was found just at the individual anaerobic threshold in both the endurance- and speed-trained groups. On the contrary, the EMG threshold for m. rectus f., approximated the anaerobic threshold at a blood lactate level of 4 mmol/l. The results indicate that the EMG threshold reflects the threshold pattern in blood lactate accumulation during progressive exercise in endurance- as well as speed-trained athletes. Therefore, it may serve in sports medicine practice as a useful, noninvasive measure of anaerobic threshold. Verf.-Referat (gekuerzt)