Journal article
Psycho-physiological responses to perceptually-regulated interval runs in hypoxia and normoxia
Physiology & Behavior, Vol.209, Article 112611
2019
Abstract
We investigated whether perceptually-regulated high-intensity intervals in hypoxia are associated with slower running velocities versus normoxia, when physiological responses and exercise-related sensations remain the same. Nineteen trained runners (33.4 ± 9.1 years) completed a high-intensity interval running protocol (4 × 4-min intervals at a clamped perceived rating exertion of 16 on the 6–20 Borg scale, 3-min passive recoveries) in either hypoxic (HYP; FiO2 15.0%) or normoxic (NOR; FiO2 20.9%) conditions. Participants adjusted to a progressively slower running velocity from interval 1–4 (−7.0%), and more so in HYP vs. NOR for intervals 2, 3 and 4 (−4.6%, −6.4% and − 7.9%, respectively; p < .01). Heart rate increased from interval 1–4 (+4.8%; p < .01), independent of condition. Arterial oxygen saturation was lower in HYP vs. NOR (86.0% vs. 94.8%; p < .01). Oxyhemoglobin (−23.7%) and total hemoglobin (−77.0%) decreased, whilst deoxyhemoglobin increased (+44.9%) from interval 1–4 (p < .01), independent of condition. Perceived recovery (−41.6%) and motivation (−21.8%) were progressively lower from interval 1–4, and more so in HYP vs. NOR for intervals 2, 3 and 4 (recovery: −8.8%, −24.2% and − 29.3%; motivation: −5.3%, −20.3% and − 22.4%, respectively; p < .01). Perceived breathlessness (+18.6%), limb discomfort (+44.0%) and pleasure (−32.2%) changed from interval 1–4, with significant differences (+21.8%, +11.3% and − 31.3%, respectively) between HYP and NOR (p < .01). Slower interval running velocities in hypoxia achieve similar heart rate and muscle oxygenation responses to those observed in normoxia when perceptually-regulated, yet at the expense of less favourable exercise-related sensations.
Details
- Title
- Psycho-physiological responses to perceptually-regulated interval runs in hypoxia and normoxia
- Authors/Creators
- L. Hobbins (Author/Creator) - London South Bank UniversityN. Gaoua (Author/Creator) - London South Bank UniversityS. Hunter (Author/Creator) - London South Bank UniversityO. Girard (Author/Creator) - Murdoch University
- Publication Details
- Physiology & Behavior, Vol.209, Article 112611
- Publisher
- Elsevier BV
- Identifiers
- 991005542666507891
- Copyright
- © 2019 Elsevier Inc.
- Murdoch Affiliation
- Murdoch Applied Sports Science Laboratory
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article
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- Domestic collaboration
- International collaboration
- Citation topics
- 1 Clinical & Life Sciences
- 1.172 Sports Science
- 1.172.1727 High-Altitude Physiology
- Web Of Science research areas
- Behavioral Sciences
- Psychology, Biological
- ESI research areas
- Neuroscience & Behavior