The Relationship between Climbing Ability and Physiological Responses to Rock Climbing

Author:

Baláš Jiří1ORCID,Panáčková Michaela1ORCID,Strejcová Barbora1ORCID,Martin Andrew J.2,Cochrane Darryl J.2,Kaláb Miloš1,Kodejška Jan1,Draper Nick3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Physical Education and Sport, Charles University in Prague, 16252 Prague, Czech Republic

2. School of Sport & Exercise, Massey University, Palmerston North 4442, New Zealand

3. School of Sport & Physical Education, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, Canterbury 8140, New Zealand

Abstract

Aim. The aim of this study was to examine the relationship between submaximal and maximal physiological responses to rock climbing for climbers of differing abilities.Methods. Twenty-six male climbers performed a submaximal climbing test on a known circuit at 90° (vertical) and 105° (15° overhanging) inclination and speed 25 movements·min−1. A maximal test was undertaken on a similar circuit at the same speed with inclination increasing by 10° for each successive 3 min stage.Results. Mean oxygen consumption and heart rate (HR) increased with wall inclination and climbers reached a mean (±SD) peakV˙O2of 40.3 ± 3.5 mL·kg−1·min−1during the maximal test. Self-reported climbing ability was negatively correlated withV˙O2and HR during the submaximal test at 90° (V˙O2,r=0.82; HR, andr=0.66) and at 105° (V˙O2,r=0.84; HR, andr=0.78) suggesting an increased exercise economy for climbers with a higher ability level.Conclusion. Findings from this study indicate that there is a relationship between wall inclination and the physiological demand of a climb. However, the increased technical ability and fitness of higher level climbers appears to an extent to offset the increased demand through improved exercise economy which in turn leads to an increased time to exhaustion and an improvement in performance.

Funder

Czech Ministry of Education

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

General Environmental Science,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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