Intermittent and continuous high‐intensity exercise training induce similar acute but different chronic muscle adaptations

Feb 18, 2014Experimental physiology

High-intensity exercise done in intervals or continuously causes similar short-term but different long-term muscle changes

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Abstract

High-intensity interval training (HIIT) lasting less than 10 minutes improved peak oxygen uptake from 45.7 ± 5.4 to 48.3 ± 6.5 ml kg(-1) min(-1).

  • Both intermittent (4x30 s with rest) and continuous high-intensity exercise (4 min) protocols led to similar increases in certain cellular signaling markers related to energy metabolism.
  • Despite the similar acute responses, continuous training did not enhance skeletal muscle mitochondrial content or activity.
  • Improvements in 250 kJ time trial performance were observed, decreasing from 26:32 ± 4:48 to 23:55 ± 4:16 min:s.
  • The findings suggest that the intermittent nature of high-intensity exercise may be crucial for skeletal muscle adaptations in low-volume HIIT.

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Full Text

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