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Role of aerobic metabolism in sprint swimming Enhancing performance. Dr Jamie Pringle; Dr Mike Peyrebrune English Institute of Sport, Loughborough. Physiological description. Disproportional high volume of training. Sprint v endurance trained. Differences between individuals. Fitness status.
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Role of aerobic metabolism in sprint swimmingEnhancing performance Dr Jamie Pringle; Dr Mike Peyrebrune English Institute of Sport, Loughborough
Physiological description Disproportional high volume of training Sprint v endurance trained Differences between individuals Fitness status Aerobic/efficiency interactions Examples from other sports Optimising warm-up Examples from the research Potential to enhance it? Long v short course differences
Sprinting Definition • Olympic events • 50m Free & 100m events • Long Course vs. Short Course • Duration • - 22 to 26 s • - 48 to 70 s • Further adjustments for juniors & sub-elite level
Review of 30+ studies Considerably larger aerobic component than previously understood AEROBIC % 12 27 37 45 51 56 63 73 79 ANAEROBIC % 88 73 63 55 49 44 37 27 21 From Gastin (2001). Energy System Interaction and Relative Contribution During Maximal Exercise. Sports. Med. 31:725-741
FASTER VO2 KINETICSDECREASES O2 DEFICIT Cardiac patient or very unfit Sedentary Endurance trained
High type I fibres High type II fibres Pringle et al (2003). Oxygen uptake kinetics during moderate, heavy and severe intensity ‘submaximal’ exercise in humans: the influence of muscle fibre type and capillarisation. Eur. J. Appl. Physiol., Vol. 89, pp. 289-290
Anaerobic work capacity (AWC) and oxygen use – all-out 60 s race 55% anaerobic 45% aerobic
VO2 kinetics The speed at which VO2 rises
100% VO2 max ~95% VO2 max 110% VO2 max O2 deficit O2 deficit O2 deficit aerobic 2:20 ± 0:06 min:s 5:13 ± 0:50 min:s 9:48 ± 0:47 min:s Total O2 used: 6 L Total O2 used: 15 L Total O2 used: 31 L Total O2 required: 20 L Total O2 required: 29 L Total O2 required: 36 L O2 deficit: 14 L O2 deficit: 14 L O2 deficit: 15 L Carter, Pringle, Barstow, Doust (2006). Int. J. Sports Med., Vol. 27, pp. 149-157
Prior heavy exercise Raises blood lactate – to 3 to 6 mM region Muscle ‘vasodilatates’ – blood flow and oxygen delivery improved Subsequent exercise VO2 response is effectively ‘speeded’ – faster adaptation Repeated sprint recovery improved Burnley et al. (2001). Exp Physiol ;86; 417-425;
Prior heavy exercise • Effect lasts for ~30 min • Lactate elevated for up to an hour • Balance between recovery/restoration of AWC and residual effects of vasodilatation 10 min 20 min 30 min 40 min 50 min Burnley et al (2006). J. Appl. Physiol., Vol. 101, pp. 1320-1327
Differing types of warm-up Blood Blood • No warm-up • Moderate: 80% LT • Heavy: 6 min at 50% D • Sprint: 30 s all-out Wingate Self-paced Fixed 10 min 2 min 5 min 70% D All-out Burnley et al. (2005). Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise. 37(5):838-845
1.0 mM B[La] 330 W 1.0 mM B[La] 338 W (+3%) No warm up 6 min easy paced 3.0 mM B[La] 339 W (+3%) 5.9 mM B[La] 324 W (-2%) 6 min ‘heavy’ 30 s all-out effort Burnley et al. (2005). Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise. 37(5):838-845
Effect of prior heavy and severe intensity exercise on swimming performance in relation to critical speed and anaerobic distance capacity Hunt J ,Brickley G, Dekerle J, Pringle J. Hunt et al, (2009) (submitted)
pH pH PCr [PCr] % Time (min) Time (min) MARKERS OR EXERCISE INTENSITY % VO2 Max 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 CP LT VO2 Max ModerateHeavySevere Pi MUSCLE METABOLIC RESPONSES TO EXERCISE ABOVE AND BELOW THE ‘CRITICAL POWER’ [Pi] % 10% <CP 10% >CP Time (min) Jones, Wilkerson, DiMenna, Fulford, Poole (2007). Am J Physiol Regulatory Integrative Comp Physiol, 294:585-593
EFFECT OF PRIOR EXERCISE • Prior heavy intensity exercise enhances exercise tolerance (Carter et al, 2005) • Residual acidemia (<5mM; Burnley et el, 2005)= Vasodilation • Bohr shift in Oxyhaemoglobin dissociation curve = O2 delivery • Elevated baseline VO2 (short recovery only) O2 Deficit VO2 slow component • Prior Severe intensity exercise reduces exercise tolerance (Jones et al, 2003; Carter et al, 2005) • Depletes anaerobic work capacity (Ferguson et a, 2007; Jones et al, 2007) • Accumulation of fatigue related metabolites (H+, Pi, K+) (Jones at al, 2007) Ha = Prior heavy intensity exercise would improve performance whilst severe exercise would decrease performance in proportion to the (known) depletion of the anaerobic work (distance) capacity incurred in the prior exercise bout
Methods • Nine trained swimmers (4 female; age, 24 ± 2 years; mass 70 ± 4 kg) participated STAGE 1 STAGE 2 PERFORMANCE TEST- SWIM TRIALS PRIOR EXERCISE CONDITION PRE-TEST/ CONTOL 100m Free HEAVY 198 s at 95% of critical speed NO PRIOR EXERCISE 100m Free 400m Free 800m Free 800m Free 100m Free SEVERE 180 s at 105% of critical speed 800m Free Measures: Performance time without prior exercise-Derivation of the d v t relationship and estimation of CSS & ADC. Performance time for maximal effort swim trials –used to recalculate the CSS & ADC under prior exercise conditions • Differences between conditions were tested using repeated measures ANOVA • Relationships between data assessed using Pearson’s Product Moment Correlation
% worsening of performance time Depletion of ADC (%) Results • No ergogenic effect after HEAVY warm-up • Uniqueness of performance protocol • Anaerobic distance capacity was reduced by ~40% after SEVERE exercise • The worsening in 100m trial performance after SEVERE prior exercise was significantly related to the reduction in ADC incurred (r = 0.72; P <0.05) • 800 m performance requiring a large aerobic contribution was less affected by reduced anaerobic reserve • Aerobic ~ 90%; Anaerobic ~10% • i.e. 40% reduction in 10% • 4% reduction in total work is not detectable in this protocol
Pringle and Defever (2008, in press). Pre-exercise vasodilatation enhances total work production by increasing the aerobic contribution to ‘all-out’ cycle exercise and elevating the critical power Power ~7 to 10 % higher ~10 to 13% more O2 used ~7 to 10% more work achieved Significant beyond ~45 s
Pringle and Defever (2008, in press). Pre-exercise vasodilatation enhances total work production by increasing the aerobic contribution to ‘all-out’ cycle exercise and elevating the critical power
Short Course Total Time = 55 seconds
Long Course Total Time = 56 seconds
Long Course vs. Short Course • Total swim time increases from 33 s to 45 s • Greater stress on aerobic energy sources • 2. Swimming ~23 s sustained without a 'recovery‘ rather than 6-10 s • approximately 3 times the duration without a break - not double. 3. Check Stroke Counts to illustrate: ~ 3 to 1
Economy and efficiency Maybe the real reason for high volume?
Training volume improves efficiency “I train around 35 hours a week which means I probably swim around 120 km over the seven days. I guess that is probably more than a lot of people drive! … I do two swimming sessions a day, seven days a week… it's very hard work and the early mornings are tough but I enjoy the challenge. “ Ian Thorpe, BBC Sport 2002
Efficiency Oxygen uptake Swimming speed
Coyle (2005)Improved muscular efficiency displayed as Tour de France champion matures J. Appl Physiol 98: 2191-2196
Relationship between training history and efficiency • Metabolic component • Skill component • Improvements throughout a career • Can compensate for lesser VO2 max
Physiological description Disproportional high volume of training Sprint v endurance trained Differences between individuals Fitness status Aerobic/efficiency interactions Examples from other sports Optimising warm-up Examples from the research Potential to enhance it? Long v short course differences