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Research in Sports Medicine
An International Journal
Volume 22, 2014 - Issue 3
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Original Research

Effects of Acute Exposure to Mild Simulated Hypoxia on Hormonal Responses to Low-intensity Resistance Exercise in Untrained Men

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Pages 240-252 | Received 12 Oct 2013, Accepted 14 Mar 2014, Published online: 20 Jun 2014
 

Abstract

This study examined hormonal responses to low-intensity resistance exercise under mild simulated hypoxia. Ten resistance untrained men performed five sets of 15 repetitions of squat exercise at 30% of 1RM under normobaric hypoxia (FiO2 = 15%) and normoxia in a cross-over and counter-balanced design. Blood lactate (LAC), growth hormone (GH), total testosterone (T) and cortisol (C) were measured at pre-exercise, immediately post-exercise and 15 minutes post-exercise. LAC, GH and T significantly increased immediately after squat exercise in both trials (p < 0.05). While T returned to baseline, GH remained significantly greater at 15 minutes post-exercise. Cortisol significantly decreased immediately after and 15 minutes post-exercise in both trials (p < 0.05). No significant differences were observed between two trials in LAC, GH, T and C. It was concluded that low-intensity resistance exercise performed under mild simulated hypoxia does not induce greater anabolic hormonal responses in resistance untrained men.

This study was funded by the National Science Council in Taiwan (Grant No. NSC100-2410-H-003-002) and partially supported by a grant for ‘Aim for the Top University Plan’ from National Taiwan Normal University and the Ministry of Education of Taiwan.

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