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J Sports Med Phys Fitness ; 58(5): 576-582, 2018 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28462575

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: After the Running Anaerobic Sprint Test (RAST) high blood lactate concentrations ([La-]) are found. However, no study verified the behavior of this metabolite during RAST. For this, the aim of the present study was to verify the implications of increase [La-] on movement patterns' in RAST performance. METHODS: Six healthy and active individuals (21.8±3.1 years, 70.9±10.8 kg and 179.7±3.3 cm) executed a standardized warm-up. Two minutes later, subjects performed RAST composed of six maximal 35-m bouts separated by 10 s of passive recovery. During RAST, 14 cameras monitored the subjects to determine tridimensional and bi-dimensional mechanics. [La-] were determined before warm-up, between each bout and after RAST. RESULTS: Significant difference in performance were found after the fifth (5.1±0.1 s) and sixth (5.4±0.3 s; P<0.04) bout in relation to the first up to fourth effort. Fatigue indexes (FI% and FIREAL) were higher from fifth bout (19.2±9.4%; 19.3±10.9%; P<0.05). No significant difference was observed in [La-] on fifth and sixth bout (8.2±2.4 mM and 9.2±2.1 mM) however, both were different from all other bouts. Flight time was different between the fifth bout (0.16±0.03 s) when compared with the first (0.12±0.01 s; P=0.01) and second (0.13±0.02s; P=0.03) bouts. CONCLUSIONS: RAST performance can be influenced by physiological changes. Biomechanical behavior does not alter performance without a sum of physiological events.


Subject(s)
Anaerobic Threshold/physiology , Exercise Test , Lactic Acid/blood , Warm-Up Exercise/physiology , Exercise Test/methods , Fatigue , Humans , Oxygen Consumption/physiology , Respiratory Mechanics/physiology , Running/physiology , Young Adult
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