Energy system contributions during incremental exercise test

The main purpose of this study was to determine the relative contributions of the aerobic and glycolytic systems during an incremental exercise test (IET). Ten male recreational long-distance runners performed an IET consisting of three-minute incremental stages on a treadmill. The fractions of the...

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Published in:Journal of sports science & medicine Vol. 12; no. 3; pp. 454 - 460
Main Authors: Bertuzzi, Rômulo, Nascimento, Eduardo M F, Urso, Rodrigo P, Damasceno, Mayara, Lima-Silva, Adriano E
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Turkey Journal of Sports Science and Medicine 01-09-2013
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Abstract The main purpose of this study was to determine the relative contributions of the aerobic and glycolytic systems during an incremental exercise test (IET). Ten male recreational long-distance runners performed an IET consisting of three-minute incremental stages on a treadmill. The fractions of the contributions of the aerobic and glycolytic systems were calculated for each stage based on the oxygen uptake and the oxygen energy equivalents derived by blood lactate accumulation, respectively. Total metabolic demand (WTOTAL) was considered as the sum of these two energy systems. The aerobic (WAER) and glycolytic (WGLYCOL) system contributions were expressed as a percentage of the WTOTAL. The results indicated that WAER (86-95%) was significantly higher than WGLYCOL (5-14%) throughout the IET (p < 0.05). In addition, there was no evidence of the sudden increase in WGLYCOL that has been previously reported to support to the "anaerobic threshold" concept. These data suggest that the aerobic metabolism is predominant throughout the IET and that energy system contributions undergo a slow transition from low to high intensity. Key PointsThe aerobic metabolism contribution is the predominant throughout the maximal incremental test.The speed corresponding to the aerobic threshold can be considered the point in which aerobic metabolism reaches its maximal contribution.Glycolytic metabolism did not contribute largely to the energy expenditure at intensities above the anaerobic threshold.
AbstractList The main purpose of this study was to determine the relative contributions of the aerobic and glycolytic systems during an incremental exercise test (IET). Ten male recreational long-distance runners performed an IET consisting of three-minute incremental stages on a treadmill. The fractions of the contributions of the aerobic and glycolytic systems were calculated for each stage based on the oxygen uptake and the oxygen energy equivalents derived by blood lactate accumulation, respectively. Total metabolic demand ([W.sub.TOTAL]) was considered as the sum of these two energy systems. The aerobic ([W.sub.AER]) and glycolytic ([W.sub.GLYCOL]) system contributions were expressed as a percentage of the [W.sub.TOTAL]. The results indicated that [W.sub.AER] (86-95%) was significantly higher than [W.sub.GLYCOL] (5-14%) throughout the IET (p < 0.05). In addition, there was no evidence of the sudden increase in [W.sub.GLYCOL] that has been previously reported to support to the "anaerobic threshold" concept. These data suggest that the aerobic metabolism is predominant throughout the IET and that energy system contributions undergo a slow transition from low to high intensity. Key words: Oxygen uptake, blood lactate, aerobic threshold, anaerobic threshold, onset of blood lactate accumulation, energy metabolism contribution.
The main purpose of this study was to determine the relative contributions of the aerobic and glycolytic systems during an incremental exercise test (IET). Ten male recreational long-distance runners performed an IET consisting of three-minute incremental stages on a treadmill. The fractions of the contributions of the aerobic and glycolytic systems were calculated for each stage based on the oxygen uptake and the oxygen energy equivalents derived by blood lactate accumulation, respectively. Total metabolic demand ([W.sub.TOTAL]) was considered as the sum of these two energy systems. The aerobic ([W.sub.AER]) and glycolytic ([W.sub.GLYCOL]) system contributions were expressed as a percentage of the [W.sub.TOTAL]. The results indicated that [W.sub.AER] (86-95%) was significantly higher than [W.sub.GLYCOL] (5-14%) throughout the IET (p < 0.05). In addition, there was no evidence of the sudden increase in [W.sub.GLYCOL] that has been previously reported to support to the "anaerobic threshold" concept. These data suggest that the aerobic metabolism is predominant throughout the IET and that energy system contributions undergo a slow transition from low to high intensity.
The main purpose of this study was to determine the relative contributions of the aerobic and glycolytic systems during an incremental exercise test (IET). Ten male recreational long-distance runners performed an IET consisting of three-minute incremental stages on a treadmill. The fractions of the contributions of the aerobic and glycolytic systems were calculated for each stage based on the oxygen uptake and the oxygen energy equivalents derived by blood lactate accumulation, respectively. Total metabolic demand (W TOTAL ) was considered as the sum of these two energy systems. The aerobic (W AER ) and glycolytic (W GLYCOL ) system contributions were expressed as a percentage of the W TOTAL . The results indicated that W AER (86-95%) was significantly higher than W GLYCOL (5-14%) throughout the IET (p < 0.05). In addition, there was no evidence of the sudden increase in W GLYCOL that has been previously reported to support to the “anaerobic threshold” concept. These data suggest that the aerobic metabolism is predominant throughout the IET and that energy system contributions undergo a slow transition from low to high intensity. Key Points The aerobic metabolism contribution is the predominant throughout the maximal incremental test. The speed corresponding to the aerobic threshold can be considered the point in which aerobic metabolism reaches its maximal contribution. Glycolytic metabolism did not contribute largely to the energy expenditure at intensities above the anaerobic threshold.
The main purpose of this study was to determine the relative contributions of the aerobic and glycolytic systems during an incremental exercise test (IET). Ten male recreational long-distance runners performed an IET consisting of three-minute incremental stages on a treadmill. The fractions of the contributions of the aerobic and glycolytic systems were calculated for each stage based on the oxygen uptake and the oxygen energy equivalents derived by blood lactate accumulation, respectively. Total metabolic demand (WTOTAL) was considered as the sum of these two energy systems. The aerobic (WAER) and glycolytic (WGLYCOL) system contributions were expressed as a percentage of the WTOTAL. The results indicated that WAER (86-95%) was significantly higher than WGLYCOL (5-14%) throughout the IET (p < 0.05). In addition, there was no evidence of the sudden increase in WGLYCOL that has been previously reported to support to the "anaerobic threshold" concept. These data suggest that the aerobic metabolism is predominant throughout the IET and that energy system contributions undergo a slow transition from low to high intensity. Key PointsThe aerobic metabolism contribution is the predominant throughout the maximal incremental test.The speed corresponding to the aerobic threshold can be considered the point in which aerobic metabolism reaches its maximal contribution.Glycolytic metabolism did not contribute largely to the energy expenditure at intensities above the anaerobic threshold.
The main purpose of this study was to determine the relative contributions of the aerobic and glycolytic systems during an incremental exercise test (IET). Ten male recreational long-distance runners performed an IET consisting of three-minute incremental stages on a treadmill. The fractions of the contributions of the aerobic and glycolytic systems were calculated for each stage based on the oxygen uptake and the oxygen energy equivalents derived by blood lactate accumulation, respectively. Total metabolic demand (WTOTAL) was considered as the sum of these two energy systems. The aerobic (WAER) and glycolytic (WGLYCOL) system contributions were expressed as a percentage of the WTOTAL. The results indicated that WAER (86-95%) was significantly higher than WGLYCOL (5-14%) throughout the IET (p < 0.05). In addition, there was no evidence of the sudden increase in WGLYCOL that has been previously reported to support to the “anaerobic threshold” concept. These data suggest that the aerobic metabolism is predominant throughout the IET and that energy system contributions undergo a slow transition from low to high intensity.
Audience Academic
Author Damasceno, Mayara
Bertuzzi, Rômulo
Urso, Rodrigo P
Lima-Silva, Adriano E
Nascimento, Eduardo M F
AuthorAffiliation 1 Endurance Sports Research Group (GEDAE-USP), School of Physical Education and Sport, University of São Paulo , Brazil
2 Sports Science Research Group (GPCE-UFAL), Academic Center of Vitoria, Federal University of Pernambuco , Brazil
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Keywords onset of blood lactate accumulation
aerobic threshold
Oxygen uptake
blood lactate
energy metabolism contribution
anaerobic threshold
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SubjectTerms Anaerobic threshold
Bioenergetics
Employment
Energy
Energy metabolism
Exercise
Fitness equipment
Medicine
Metabolism
Neuromuscular diseases
Physical education
Physical fitness
Physiology
Running
Sports medicine
Sports training
Strength training
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Title Energy system contributions during incremental exercise test
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