The influence of prior cycling on biomechanical and cardiorespiratory response profiles during running in triathletes

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Deutscher übersetzter Titel:Der Einfluss des vorhergehenden Radfahrens auf die biomechanischen und kardiopulmonalen Reaktionsmuster beim Laufen im Triathlon
Autor:Hue, O.; Chollet, D.; Boussana, A.; Préfaut, C.; LeGallais, D.
Erschienen in:European journal of applied physiology
Veröffentlicht:77 (1997), 1-2, S. 98-105, Lit.
Format: Literatur (SPOLIT)
Publikationstyp: Zeitschriftenartikel
Medienart: Gedruckte Ressource Elektronische Ressource (online)
Sprache:Englisch
ISSN:1439-6319, 0301-5548
DOI:10.1007/s004210050306
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Erfassungsnummer:PU199801208877
Quelle:BISp

Abstract des Autors

The aim of the present study was to determine the effects of 40 km of cycling on the biomechanical and cardiorespiratory responses measured during the running segment of a classic triathlon, with particular emphasis on the time course of these responses. Seven male triathletes underwent four successive laboratory trials: (1) 40 km of cycling followed by a 10-km triathlon run (TR), (2) a 10-km control run (CR) at the same speed as TR, (3) an incremental treadmill test, and (4) an incremental cycle test. The following ventilatory data were collected every minute using an automated breath-by-breath system: pulmonary ventilation (VE, l/min), oxygen uptake (VO2, ml/min/kg), carbon dioxide output (ml/min), respiratory equivalents for oxygen (VE/VO2) and carbon dioxide (VE/VCO2), respiratory exchange ratio (R) respiratory frequency (f, breaths/min), and tidal volume (ml). Heart rate (HR, beats/min) was monitored using a telemetric system. Biomechanical variables included stride length (SL) and stride frequency (SF) recorded on a video tape. The results showed that the following variables were significantly higher (analysis of variance, P<0.05) for TR than for CR: VO2 (51.7(3.4) vs 48.3(3.9) ml/kg/min, respectively), VE (100.4(1.4) l/min vs 84.4(7.0) l/min), VE/VO2 (24.2(2.6) vs 21.5(2.7)), VE/VCO2 (25.2(2.6) vs 22.4(2.6)), f (55.8(11.6) vs 49.0(12.4) breaths/min) and HR (175(7) vs 168(9) beats/min). Moreover, the time needed to reach steady-state was shorter for HR and VO2 (1 min and 2 min, respectively) and longer for VE (7 min). In contrast, the biomechanical parameters, i.e. SL and SF, remained unchanged throughout TR versus CR. We conclude that the first minutes of the run segment after cycling in an experimental triathlon were specific in terms of VO2 and cardiorespiratory variables, and nonspecific in terms of biomechanical variables. Verf.-Referat