Anaerobic Threshold Biophysical Characterisation of the Four Swimming Techniques

Author:

Carvalho Diogo Duarte12,Soares Susana1,Zacca Rodrigo123,Sousa João1,Marinho Daniel Almeida45,Silva António José56,Vilas-Boas João Paulo12,Fernandes Ricardo J.12

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Sport, Centre of Research, Education, Innovation and Intervention in Sport, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal

2. Porto Biomechanics Laboratory, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal

3. CAPES Foundation, Ministry of Education of Brazil, Brasília, Brazil

4. Department of Sport Sciences, University of Beira Interior, Covilhã, Portugal

5. Research Center in Sports Sciences, Health Sciences and Human Development, University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro, Vila Real, Portugal

6. Department of Sport Sciences, University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro, Vila Real, Portugal

Abstract

AbstractThe anaerobic threshold (AnT) seems to be not only a physiologic boundary but also a transition after which swimmers technique changes, modifying their biomechanical behaviour. We expanded the AnT concept to a biophysical construct in the four conventional swimming techniques. Seventy-two elite swimmers performed a 5×200 m incremental protocol in their preferred swimming technique (with a 0.05 m·s−1 increase and a 30 s interval between steps). A capillary blood samples were collected from the fingertip and stroke rate (SR) and length (SL) determined for the assessment of [La], SR and SL vs. velocity inflexion points (using the interception of a pair of linear and exponential regression curves). The [La] values at the AnT were 3.3±1.0, 3.9±1.1, 2.9±1 .34 and 4.5±1.4 mmol·l−1 (mean±SD) for front crawl, backstroke, breaststroke and butterfly, and its corresponding velocity correlated highly with those at SR and SL inflection points (r=0.91–0.99, p<0.001). The agreement analyses confirmed that AnT represents a biophysical boundary in the four competitive swimming techniques and can be determined individually using [La] and/or SR/SL. Blood lactate increase speed can help characterise swimmers’ anaerobic behaviour after AnT and between competitive swimming techniques.

Funder

National funding through the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation

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