Changes in Cardiac Tone Regulation with Fatigue after Supra-Maximal Running Exercise

Author:

Leprêtre Pierre-Marie12,Lopes Philippe34,Thomas Claire23,Hanon Christine2

Affiliation:

1. Laboratoire de Recherche Adaptations Physiologiques à l'Exercice et Réadaptations à l'Effort, EA 3300, UFR-STAPS, Université de Picardie Jules Verne, Avenue Paul Claudel, 80025 Amiens cedex 1, France

2. Laboratoire de Biomécanique et de Physiologie, Mission Recherche, Institut National du Sport, de l'Expertise et de la Performance(INSEP), 75012, Paris, France

3. Département STAPS, UFR Sciences Fondamentales Appliquées, Université d'Evry-Val d'Essonne,91025, Evry, France

4. Centre d'étude de la Sensorimotricité (CESeM), UFR Biomédicale, Université Paris Descartes, UMR 8194 CNRS, 45 rue des Saints-Pères, F-75270 Paris Cedex 06, France

Abstract

To investigate the effects of fatigue and metabolite accumulation on the postexercicse parasympathetic reactivation, 11 long-sprint runners performed on an outdoor track an exhaustive 400 m long sprint event and a 300 m with the same 400 m pacing strategy. Time constant of heart rate recovery (HRR), time (RMSSD), and frequency (HF, and LF) varying vagal-related heart rate variability indexes were assessed during the 7 min period immediately following exercise. Biochemical parameters (blood lactate, pH, PO2, PCO2, SaO2, and HCO3) were measured at 1, 4 and 7 min after exercise. Time to perform 300 m was not significantly different between both running trials. HHR measured after the 400 m running exercise was longer compared to 300 m running bouts ( versus  s, ). Absolute power density in the LF and HF bands was also lower after 400 m compared to the 300 m trial (). No correlation was found between biochemical and cardiac recovery responses except for the PO2values which were significantly correlated with HF levels measured 4 min after both bouts. Thus, it appears that fatigue rather than metabolic stresses occurring during a supramaximal exercise could explain the delayed postexercise parasympathetic reactivation in longer sprint runs.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

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

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