Heart rate dynamics and lactate following high-intensity race-pace continuous vs interval workouts in highly trained athletes

  1. Blasco-Lafarga, C. 1
  2. Martinez-Navarro, I. 12
  3. Mateo-March, M. 3
  4. Montoya, A. 12
  1. 1 Universitat de València
    info

    Universitat de València

    Valencia, España

    ROR https://ror.org/043nxc105

  2. 2 Sports Health Unit, 9 de Octubre Vithas Hospital, Valencia
  3. 3 Universidad Miguel Hernández de Elche
    info

    Universidad Miguel Hernández de Elche

    Elche, España

    ROR https://ror.org/01azzms13

Revista:
Physiology International

ISSN: 2498-602X 2677-0164

Año de publicación: 2021

Volumen: 108

Número: 2

Páginas: 303-316

Tipo: Artículo

DOI: 10.1556/2060.2021.00153 GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openAcceso abierto editor

Otras publicaciones en: Physiology International

Resumen

PurposeThe present study aimed to compare the physiological responses of high-intensity race-pace continuous vs. interval workouts commonly used in middle-distance athletics, by means of analyzing post-exercise cardiac autonomic regulation and lactate.MethodsNineteen highly-trained 800-m male runners were asked to run a 600-m race-pace continuous workout and a 2 × 4 × 200-m interval training, counterbalanced and randomized within one week of difference. Blood lactate jointly with linear and nonlinear heart rate dynamics were assessed during the immediate 15-min recovery. Age-category (Under23-Senior vs. Juvenile-Junior) was considered as an inter-subject factor.ResultsPeak lactate was higher following the interval training (15.51 ± 0.99 vs 13.83 ± 1.77 mmol L−1; P < 0.05) whereas lactate removal was almost nonexistent 15 min after both workouts (between 0 and 16%). Vagal modulation (ln RMSSD and lnRMSSD to RR ratio) remained significantly depressed at the end of recovery following both workouts, although the alteration was larger following the interval training. Detrended Fluctuation Analysis evidenced a more random HR behavior (DFA1 closer to 0.5) during the first 9 min of recovery after the interval training, whereas no significant change was observed in heart rate complexity (SampEn). Neither were differences found in post-exercise lactate and HR dynamics as a function of age-category.ConclusionsHigh-intensity workouts commonly used in middle-distance athletics, both race-pace continuous and intervallic approaches, induce a large depression of vagal modulation in highly trained runners, although interval trainings appear to induce even a greater alteration of both linear and nonlinear HR dynamics and a higher post-exercise peak lactate.