Autonomic Recovery After Exercise in Trained Athletes: Intensity and Duration Effects
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Purpose: To investigate the effects of training intensity and duration, through a range representative of training in endurance athletes, on acute recovery of autonomic nervous system (ANS) balance after exercise.
Methods: Nine highly trained (HT) male runners (VO2max 72 +/- 5 mL.kg.min(-1), 14 +/- 3 training hours per week) and eight trained (T) male subjects (VO2max 60 +/- 5 mL.kg.min(-1), 7 +/- 1 training hours per week) completed preliminary testing to determine ventilatory thresholds (VT1, VT2) and VO2max. HT performed four intensity-controlled training sessions: 60 min and 120 min below VT1; 60 min with 30 min between VT1 and VT2 (threshold); and 60 min above VT2 (6 x 3 min at 96% VO2max, 2 min of recovery). T also completed the interval session to compare ANS recovery between HT and T. Supine heart rate variability (HRV) was quantified at regular intervals through 4 h of recovery.
Results: When HT ran 60 or 120 min below VT1, HRV returned to pretraining values within 5-10 min. However, training at threshold (2.7 +/- 0.4 mM) or above VT2 (7.1 +/- 0.7 mM) induced a significant, but essentially identical, delay of HRV recovery (return to baseline by approximately 30 min). In T, HRV recovery was significantly slower, with HRV returning to baseline by >or=90 min after the same interval session.
Conclusions: In the highly trained endurance athlete, exercise for <or=120 min below the first ventilatory threshold causes minimal disturbance in ANS balance. ANS recovery is more rapid in highly trained than in trained subjects after high-intensity exercise. Further, the first ventilatory threshold may demarcate a "binary" threshold for ANS/HRV recovery in highly trained athletes, because further delays in HRV recovery with even higher training intensities were not observed.
Leal-Menezes R, Rodrigues-Krause J, Dos Santos G, do Nascimento Queiroz J, Silva da Silva C, Umpierre D Clin Auton Res. 2025; .
PMID: 39821813 DOI: 10.1007/s10286-024-01103-7.
Nost H, Aune M, van den Tillaar R Sports (Basel). 2024; 12(12).
PMID: 39728866 PMC: 11679080. DOI: 10.3390/sports12120326.
Olympic distance duathlon and cardiac performance in highly-trained triathletes.
Donaldson J, Wiles J, Papadakis M, Sharma S, Sharma R, ODriscoll J Physiol Rep. 2024; 12(24):e70154.
PMID: 39725671 PMC: 11671242. DOI: 10.14814/phy2.70154.
Held S, Isenmann E, Rappelt L, Wiedenmann T, Kutschki D, Harbrecht J Front Physiol. 2024; 15:1446837.
PMID: 39619091 PMC: 11604715. DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2024.1446837.
The Training Intensity Distribution of Marathon Runners Across Performance Levels.
Muniz-Pumares D, Hunter B, Meyler S, Maunder E, Smyth B Sports Med. 2024; .
PMID: 39616560 DOI: 10.1007/s40279-024-02137-7.