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Short‐term sprint interval versus traditional...
Journal article

Short‐term sprint interval versus traditional endurance training: similar initial adaptations in human skeletal muscle and exercise performance

Abstract

Brief, intense exercise training may induce metabolic and performance adaptations comparable to traditional endurance training. However, no study has directly compared these diverse training strategies in a standardized manner. We therefore examined changes in exercise capacity and molecular and cellular adaptations in skeletal muscle after low volume sprint-interval training (SIT) and high volume endurance training (ET). Sixteen active men (21 +/- 1 years, ) were assigned to a SIT or ET group (n = 8 each) and performed six training sessions over 14 days. Each session consisted of either four to six repeats of 30 s 'all out' cycling at approximately 250% with 4 min recovery (SIT) or 90-120 min continuous cycling at approximately 65% (ET). Training time commitment over 2 weeks was approximately 2.5 h for SIT and approximately 10.5 h for ET, and total training volume was approximately 90% lower for SIT versus ET ( approximately 630 versus approximately 6500 kJ). Training decreased the time required to complete 50 and 750 kJ cycling time trials, with no difference between groups (main effects, P

Authors

Gibala MJ; Little JP; Van Essen M; Wilkin GP; Burgomaster KA; Safdar A; Raha S; Tarnopolsky MA

Journal

The Journal of Physiology, Vol. 575, No. 3, pp. 901–911

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

September 15, 2006

DOI

10.1113/jphysiol.2006.112094

ISSN

0022-3751

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