Repeated short cold-water immersions are sufficient to habituate to the cold, but do not lead to adaptations during exercise in normobaric hypoxia.
In: Applied Physiology, Nutrition & Metabolism, Jg. 49 (2024-05-01), Heft 5, S. 659-666
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Zugriff:
We sought to assess the effects of repeated cold-water immersions (CWI) on respiratory, metabolic, and sympathoadrenal responses to graded exercise in hypoxia. Sixteen (2 female) participants (age: 21.2 ± 1.3 years; body fat: 12.3 ± 7.7%; body surface area 1.87 ± 0.16 m 2 , VO 2peak : 48.7 ± 7.9 mL/kg/min) underwent 6 CWI in 12.0 ± 1.2 °C. Each CWI was 5 min, twice daily, separated by ≥4 h, for three consecutive days, during which metabolic data were collected. The day before and after the repeated CWI intervention, participants ran in normobaric hypoxia (F I O 2 = 0.135) for 4 min at 25%, 40%, 60%, and 75% of their sea level peak oxygen consumption (VO 2peak ). CWI had no effect on VO 2 (p > 0.05), but reduced the V E (CWI #1: 27.1 ± 17.8 versus CWI #6: 19.9 ± 12.1 L/min) (p < 0.01), V T (CWI #1: 1.3 ± 0.4 vs CWI #6: 1.1 ± 0.4 L) (p < 0.01), and V E :VO 2 (CWI #1: 53.5 ± 24.1 vs CWI #6: 41.6 ± 20.5) (p < 0.01) during subsequent CWI. Further, post exercise plasma epinephrine was lower after CWI compared to before (103.3 ± 43.1; 73.4 ± 34.6 pg/mL) (p = 0.03), with no change in pre-exercising values (75.4 ± 30.7; 72.5 ± 25.9 pg/mL). While these changes were noteworthy, it is important to acknowledge there were no changes in pulmonary (V E , V T , and V E :VO 2 ) or metabolic (VO 2 , SmO 2 , and SpO 2 ) variables across multiple hypoxic exercise workloads following repeated CWI. CWI habituated participants to cold water, but this did not lead to adaptations during exercise in normobaric hypoxia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Titel: |
Repeated short cold-water immersions are sufficient to habituate to the cold, but do not lead to adaptations during exercise in normobaric hypoxia.
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Autor/in / Beteiligte Person: | Dorsett, Geoffrey ; Pereira, Felipe Gorini ; Kuennen, Matthew ; Waugh, Kyren ; Barnard, Jackson ; Bennett, Jonluke ; Garcia, Gabriel ; Gillum, Trevor |
Zeitschrift: | Applied Physiology, Nutrition & Metabolism, Jg. 49 (2024-05-01), Heft 5, S. 659-666 |
Veröffentlichung: | 2024 |
Medientyp: | academicJournal |
ISSN: | 1715-5312 (print) |
DOI: | 10.1139/apnm-2023-0523 |
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