Effect of warm-up on metabolic responses to strenuous exercise
- 1 January 1975
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise
- Vol. 7 (2) , 146???149-9
- https://doi.org/10.1249/00005768-197500720-00026
Abstract
Aerobic and anaerobic energy transformations were measured in two trained runners during 90-sec treadmill runs at 23.6 km/hr (2% grade). The runs were preceded by rest or cither of two warm-ups: 1) 15-min run at 10 km/hr, or 2) 15-min run at 10 km/hr followed by 3-min standing. Compared with runs without warm-up, during the third half minute of runs following both types of warm-up 11% greater heart rates (HR), 8% greater oxygen consumption (V̇o2), and unchanged ventilation were recorded. The rate constant of the approach of V̇o2 to O2 in the first minute of work was unaffected by warm-up. Runs following either warm-up resulted in 25% lower lactate production; during these runs 3 to 4°C higher gastrocnemius muscle temperatures (Tm) were maintained. The differences in HR, V̇o2, and Tm continued throughout exhausting 5-min runs at 20.9 km/hr (2% grade). An elevated muscle temperature may therefore be requisite for the maximal aerobic response to a short exhausting run.Keywords
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