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Impact of Hypoventilation Training on Muscle Oxygenation, Myoelectrical Changes, Systemic [K(+)], and Repeated-Sprint Ability in Basketball Players

This study investigated the impact of repeated-sprint (RS) training with voluntary hypoventilation at low lung volume (VHL) on RS ability (RSA) and on performance in a 30-15 intermittent fitness test (30-15(IFT)). Over 4 weeks, 17 basketball players included eight sessions of straight-line running R...

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Autores principales: Lapointe, Julien, Paradis-Deschênes, Pénélope, Woorons, Xavier, Lemaître, Fréderic, Billaut, François
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7739750/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33345021
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fspor.2020.00029
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author Lapointe, Julien
Paradis-Deschênes, Pénélope
Woorons, Xavier
Lemaître, Fréderic
Billaut, François
author_facet Lapointe, Julien
Paradis-Deschênes, Pénélope
Woorons, Xavier
Lemaître, Fréderic
Billaut, François
author_sort Lapointe, Julien
collection PubMed
description This study investigated the impact of repeated-sprint (RS) training with voluntary hypoventilation at low lung volume (VHL) on RS ability (RSA) and on performance in a 30-15 intermittent fitness test (30-15(IFT)). Over 4 weeks, 17 basketball players included eight sessions of straight-line running RS and RS with changes of direction into their usual training, performed either with normal breathing (CTL, n = 8) or with VHL (n = 9). Before and after the training, athletes completed a RSA test (12 × 30-m, 25-s rest) and a 30-15(IFT). During the RSA test, the fastest sprint (RSA(best)), time-based percentage decrement score (RSA(Sdec)), total electromyographic intensity (RMS), and spectrum frequency (MPF) of the biceps femoris and gastrocnemius muscles, and biceps femoris NIRS-derived oxygenation were assessed for every sprint. A capillary blood sample was also taken after the last sprint to analyse metabolic and ionic markers. Cohen's effect sizes (ES) were used to compare group differences. Compared with CTL, VHL did not clearly modify RSA(best), but likely lowered RSA(Sdec) (VHL: −24.5% vs. CTL: −5.9%, group difference: −19.8%, ES −0.44). VHL also lowered the maximal deoxygenation induced by sprints ([HHb](max); group difference: −2.9%, ES −0.72) and enhanced the reoxygenation during recovery periods ([HHb](min); group difference: −3.6%, ES −1.00). VHL increased RMS (group difference: 18.2%, ES 1.28) and maintained MPF toward higher frequencies (group difference: 9.8 ± 5.0%, ES 1.40). These changes were concomitant with a lower potassium (K(+)) concentration (group difference: −17.5%, ES −0.67), and the lowering in [K(+)] was largely correlated with RSA(Sdec) post-training in VHL only (r = 0.66, p < 0.05). However, VHL did not clearly alter PO(2), hemoglobin, lactate and bicarbonate concentration and base excess. There was no difference between group velocity gains for the 30-15(IFT) (CTL: 6.9% vs. VHL: 7.5%, ES 0.07). These results indicate that RS training combined with VHL may improve RSA, which could be relevant to basketball player success. This gain may be attributed to greater muscle reoxygenation, enhanced muscle recruitment strategies, and improved K(+) regulation to attenuate the development of muscle fatigue, especially in type-II muscle fibers.
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spelling pubmed-77397502020-12-17 Impact of Hypoventilation Training on Muscle Oxygenation, Myoelectrical Changes, Systemic [K(+)], and Repeated-Sprint Ability in Basketball Players Lapointe, Julien Paradis-Deschênes, Pénélope Woorons, Xavier Lemaître, Fréderic Billaut, François Front Sports Act Living Sports and Active Living This study investigated the impact of repeated-sprint (RS) training with voluntary hypoventilation at low lung volume (VHL) on RS ability (RSA) and on performance in a 30-15 intermittent fitness test (30-15(IFT)). Over 4 weeks, 17 basketball players included eight sessions of straight-line running RS and RS with changes of direction into their usual training, performed either with normal breathing (CTL, n = 8) or with VHL (n = 9). Before and after the training, athletes completed a RSA test (12 × 30-m, 25-s rest) and a 30-15(IFT). During the RSA test, the fastest sprint (RSA(best)), time-based percentage decrement score (RSA(Sdec)), total electromyographic intensity (RMS), and spectrum frequency (MPF) of the biceps femoris and gastrocnemius muscles, and biceps femoris NIRS-derived oxygenation were assessed for every sprint. A capillary blood sample was also taken after the last sprint to analyse metabolic and ionic markers. Cohen's effect sizes (ES) were used to compare group differences. Compared with CTL, VHL did not clearly modify RSA(best), but likely lowered RSA(Sdec) (VHL: −24.5% vs. CTL: −5.9%, group difference: −19.8%, ES −0.44). VHL also lowered the maximal deoxygenation induced by sprints ([HHb](max); group difference: −2.9%, ES −0.72) and enhanced the reoxygenation during recovery periods ([HHb](min); group difference: −3.6%, ES −1.00). VHL increased RMS (group difference: 18.2%, ES 1.28) and maintained MPF toward higher frequencies (group difference: 9.8 ± 5.0%, ES 1.40). These changes were concomitant with a lower potassium (K(+)) concentration (group difference: −17.5%, ES −0.67), and the lowering in [K(+)] was largely correlated with RSA(Sdec) post-training in VHL only (r = 0.66, p < 0.05). However, VHL did not clearly alter PO(2), hemoglobin, lactate and bicarbonate concentration and base excess. There was no difference between group velocity gains for the 30-15(IFT) (CTL: 6.9% vs. VHL: 7.5%, ES 0.07). These results indicate that RS training combined with VHL may improve RSA, which could be relevant to basketball player success. This gain may be attributed to greater muscle reoxygenation, enhanced muscle recruitment strategies, and improved K(+) regulation to attenuate the development of muscle fatigue, especially in type-II muscle fibers. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-04-03 /pmc/articles/PMC7739750/ /pubmed/33345021 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fspor.2020.00029 Text en Copyright © 2020 Lapointe, Paradis-Deschênes, Woorons, Lemaître and Billaut. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Sports and Active Living
Lapointe, Julien
Paradis-Deschênes, Pénélope
Woorons, Xavier
Lemaître, Fréderic
Billaut, François
Impact of Hypoventilation Training on Muscle Oxygenation, Myoelectrical Changes, Systemic [K(+)], and Repeated-Sprint Ability in Basketball Players
title Impact of Hypoventilation Training on Muscle Oxygenation, Myoelectrical Changes, Systemic [K(+)], and Repeated-Sprint Ability in Basketball Players
title_full Impact of Hypoventilation Training on Muscle Oxygenation, Myoelectrical Changes, Systemic [K(+)], and Repeated-Sprint Ability in Basketball Players
title_fullStr Impact of Hypoventilation Training on Muscle Oxygenation, Myoelectrical Changes, Systemic [K(+)], and Repeated-Sprint Ability in Basketball Players
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Hypoventilation Training on Muscle Oxygenation, Myoelectrical Changes, Systemic [K(+)], and Repeated-Sprint Ability in Basketball Players
title_short Impact of Hypoventilation Training on Muscle Oxygenation, Myoelectrical Changes, Systemic [K(+)], and Repeated-Sprint Ability in Basketball Players
title_sort impact of hypoventilation training on muscle oxygenation, myoelectrical changes, systemic [k(+)], and repeated-sprint ability in basketball players
topic Sports and Active Living
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7739750/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33345021
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fspor.2020.00029
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