Physiologia (May 2024)

Physiological, Perceptual, and Neuromuscular Responses to <inline-formula><math display="inline"><semantics><mrow><mover accent="true"><mrow><mi mathvariant="normal">V</mi></mrow><mo>˙</mo></mover></mrow></semantics></math></inline-formula>O<sub>2</sub>-Clamp Cycle Ergometry Exercise

  • Pasquale J. Succi,
  • Taylor K. Dinyer-McNeely,
  • Caleb C. Voskuil,
  • Brian Benitez,
  • Minyoung Kwak,
  • Clara J. Mitchinson,
  • Mark G. Abel,
  • Jody L. Clasey,
  • Haley C. Bergstrom

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/physiologia4020013
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2
pp. 226 – 242

Abstract

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Recommendations for endurance exercise prescription are often based on percentages of heart rate (HR) or the volume of oxygen consumption (V˙O2) maximum or reserve that is extrapolated to a power output (P) or velocity. Previous work has demonstrated dissociations of the expected responses to exercise anchored to the critical heart rate (CHR) compared with the P associated with CHR. However, it is unclear if similar dissociations due to reductions in P to maintain the designated intensity would be present during exercise anchored to the V˙O2 associated with CHR (V˙O2CHR). The purpose of this study was to examine the patterns in physiological (V˙O2, HR, P, respiration rate [RR], muscle oxygen saturation [%SmO2]), neuromuscular (electromyographic and mechanomyographic amplitude [EMG AMP, MMG AMP], mean power frequency [EMG MPF, MMG MPF]), and perceptual (rating of perceived exertion [RPE]) responses during exercise at V˙O2CHR (V˙O2-clamp). On separate days, ten participants (age: 25 ± 4 yr) performed a graded exercise test and four constant P trials at 85–100% of peak P (PP) to derive CHR and V˙O2CHR. Responses were recorded during a trial to exhaustion at V˙O2CHR (32.86 ± 7.12 mL·kg−1·min−1; TLim = 31.31 ± 21.37 min) and normalized in 10% intervals of TLim to their respective values at PP. The one-way repeated-measures ANOVA with post hoc, Bonferroni-corrected, pairwise comparisons indicated differences (p p = 0.077–0.955) for %SmO2 (−17 ± 53%), EMG AMP (−3 ± 16%), MMG AMP (40 ± 61%), and MMG MPF (1 ± 7%). The loss in performance observed during V˙O2-Clamp exercise may provide a quantification of the inefficiency associated with the V˙O2 slow component phenomenon. The neuromuscular responses suggested constant muscle excitation despite the reductions in P, but the metabolic and perceptual responses suggested a combination of feedforward and feedback mechanisms regulating TLim. Future studies should further examine responses to the V˙O2-Clamp exercise at a uniform threshold.

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