Ar. Harmer et al., Skeletal muscle metabolic and ionic adaptations during intense exercise following sprint training in humans, J APP PHYSL, 89(5), 2000, pp. 1793-1803
The effects of sprint training on muscle metabolism and ion regulation duri
ng intense exercise remain controversial. We employed a rigorous methodolog
ical approach, contrasting these responses during exercise to exhaustion an
d during identical work before and after training. Seven untrained men unde
rtook 7 wk of sprint training. Subjects cycled to exhaustion at 130% pretra
ining peak oxygen uptake before (PreExh) and after training (PostExh), as w
ell as performing another posttraining test identical to PreExh (PostMatch)
. Biopsies were taken at rest and immediately postexercise. After training
in PostMatch, muscle and plasma lactate (Lac(-)) and H+ concentrations, ana
erobic ATP production rate, glycogen and ATP degradation, IMP accumulation,
and peak plasma K+ and norepinephrine concentrations were reduced (P < 0.0
5). In PostExh, time to exhaustion was 21% greater than PreExh (P < 0.001);
however, muscle Lac(-) accumulation was unchanged; muscle H+ concentration
, ATP degradation, IMP accumulation, and anaerobic ATP production rate were
reduced; and plasma Lac(-), norepinephrine, and H+ concentrations were hig
her (P < 0.05). Sprint training resulted in reduced anaerobic ATP generatio
n during intense exercise, suggesting that aerobic metabolism was enhanced,
which may allow increased time to fatigue.