Exhaustive Intermittent Cycling Preferentially Decreases Explosive Over Maximal Voluntary Torque in the Knee Extensors, With No Difference Between Normoxia and Moderate to Severe Hypoxia

Int J Sports Physiol Perform. 2023 Aug 21;18(11):1352-1356. doi: 10.1123/ijspp.2023-0101. Print 2023 Nov 1.

Abstract

Purpose: To compare the effects of graded hypoxia during exhaustive intermittent cycling on subsequent rapid and maximal torque-production capacity.

Methods: Fifteen well-trained cyclists repeated intermittent cycling bouts (15 s at 30% of anaerobic power reserve; rest = 45 s) until exhaustion at sea level (FiO2 ∼0.21/end-exercise arterial oxygen saturation ∼96%), moderate hypoxia (FiO2 ∼0.16/∼90%), and severe hypoxia (FiO2 ∼0.12/∼79%). Rapid (rate of torque development [RTD]) and maximal isometric torque-production capacities of the knee extensors were assessed at baseline (visit 1) and exhaustion (visits 2-4).

Results: Exercise capacity decreased with hypoxia severity (39 [30], 22 [13], and 13 [6] cycle efforts in sea level, moderate hypoxia, and severe hypoxia, respectively; P = .002). Changes in maximal-voluntary-contraction torque between baseline and postexercise in all conditions were not statistically significant (pooled values: -2.6% [5.7%]; P = .162). Peak RTD measured postexercise was reduced below baseline in all conditions (-21.5% [5.1%]; P ≤ .015). Compared with baseline, absolute RTD values were lower at 0- to 30-millisecond (-35.1% [5.3%], P ≤ .020), 0- to 50-millisecond (-40.0% [3.9%], P ≤ .002), 0- to 100-millisecond (-30.7% [3.7%], P ≤ .001), and 0- to 200-millisecond (-18.1% [2.4%], P ≤ .004) time intervals in all conditions.

Conclusions: Exhaustive intermittent cycling induces substantial yet comparable impairments in RTD of knee extensors between normoxia and moderate to severe hypoxia.

Keywords: altitude; explosive strength; fatigue; graded hypoxia; intermittent exercise.

MeSH terms

  • Explosive Agents*
  • Humans
  • Hypoxia
  • Isometric Contraction
  • Muscle, Skeletal
  • Oxygen
  • Torque

Substances

  • Explosive Agents
  • Oxygen