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Physiology

Heart rate recovery after aerobic and anaerobic tests: is there an influence of anaerobic speed reserve?

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Pages 820-827 | Accepted 10 Mar 2016, Published online: 28 Mar 2016
 

ABSTRACT

The present study assessed if differences in the metabolic profile, inferred from the anaerobic speed reserve (ASR), would influence the dynamics of heart rate recovery (HRR) after two modes of exercise. Thirty-nine physical education students (14 females and 25 males) volunteered for this study. Participants carried out three separate testing sessions to assess maximal sprinting speed (MSS, 1st session), repeated sprint ability (RSA, 2nd session) and maximal aerobic speed (MAS) using the Université of Montreal Track Test (UMTT, 3rd session). ASR was defined as the difference between MSS and MAS. Heart rate was continuously registered throughout the tests and during the 5-min post-test recovery. To evaluate the influence of ASR on post-exercise, HRR comparisons between ASR-based groups [high ASR vs. low ASR] and sex groups (males vs. females) were performed. Significant differences (P < 0.05) were found between high ASR and low ASR groups of the same sex for indices of relative HRR after the RSA and UMTT. In addition, after the RSA test, males from the high ASR group had a significantly slower HRR kinetics compared with the males of the low ASR (P < 0.05) and the females of high ASR (P < 0.05); whereas females of the high ASR groups had a faster HRR kinetics compared with the females of low ASR group (P < 0.05). Our results showed that in males, post-exercise HRR could be related to the ASR, whereas in females, the influence of ASR is less clear.

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Acknowledgements

We would like to thank to the Board of Directors of the Instituto Provincial de Educación Física (IPEF), Córdoba, Argentina, for their cooperation, to the volunteers for their enthusiastic participation and to Joel Rosso, Leonardo Festa, Cintia Cortez and Marcelo Bolognese for their assistance during data collection. We would like to thank Dr. Matthew Weston for the English revision.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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