Anaerobic threshold using sweat lactate sensor under hypoxia

Author:

Okawara Hiroki,Iwasawa Yuji,Sawada Tomonori,Sugai Kazuhisa,Daigo Kyohei,Seki Yuta,Ichihara Genki,Nakashima Daisuke,Sano Motoaki,Nakamura Masaya,Sato Kazuki,Fukuda Keiichi,Katsumata Yoshinori

Abstract

AbstractWe aimed to investigate the reliability and validity of sweat lactate threshold (sLT) measurement based on the real-time monitoring of the transition in sweat lactate levels (sLA) under hypoxic exercise. In this cross-sectional study, 20 healthy participants who underwent exercise tests using respiratory gas analysis under hypoxia (fraction of inspired oxygen [FiO2], 15.4 ± 0.8%) in addition to normoxia (FiO2, 20.9%) were included; we simultaneously monitored sLA transition using a wearable lactate sensor. The initial significant elevation in sLA over the baseline was defined as sLT. Under hypoxia, real-time dynamic changes in sLA were successfully visualized, including a rapid, continual rise until volitionary exhaustion and a progressive reduction in the recovery phase. High intra- and inter-evaluator reliability was demonstrated for sLT’s repeat determinations (0.782 [0.607–0.898] and 0.933 [0.841–0.973]) as intraclass correlation coefficients [95% confidence interval]. sLT correlated with ventilatory threshold (VT) (r = 0.70, p < 0.01). A strong agreement was found in the Bland–Altman plot (mean difference/mean average time: − 15.5/550.8 s) under hypoxia. Our wearable device enabled continuous and real-time lactate assessment in sweat under hypoxic conditions in healthy participants with high reliability and validity, providing additional information to detect anaerobic thresholds in hypoxic conditions.

Funder

Grant-in-Aid from Scientific Research from the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Kimura Memorial Heart Foundation Research Grant for 2019

Suzuken Memorial Foundation

Foundation for Total Health Promotion

Research Grant for Public Health Science

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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