Inter-set rest configuration effect on acute physiological and performance-related responses to a resistance training session in terrestrial vs simulated hypoxia

Metabolic stress is considered a key factor in the activation of hypertrophy mechanisms which seems to be potentiated under hypoxic conditions.This study aimed to analyze the combined effect of the type of acute hypoxia (terrestrial simulated) and of the inter-set rest configuration (60 120 s) durin...

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Published inPeerJ (San Francisco, CA) Vol. 10; p. e13469
Main Authors Benavente, Cristina, Feriche, Belén, Olcina, Guillermo, Schoenfeld, Brad J, Camacho-Cardenosa, Alba, Almeida, Filipa, Martínez-Guardado, Ismael, Timon, Rafael, Padial, Paulino
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States PeerJ. Ltd 18.05.2022
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Summary:Metabolic stress is considered a key factor in the activation of hypertrophy mechanisms which seems to be potentiated under hypoxic conditions.This study aimed to analyze the combined effect of the type of acute hypoxia (terrestrial simulated) and of the inter-set rest configuration (60 120 s) during a hypertrophic resistance training (R ) session on physiological, perceptual and muscle performance markers. Sixteen active men were randomized into two groups based on the type of hypoxia (hypobaric hypoxia, HH: 2,320 m asl; normobaric hypoxia, NH: FiO of 15.9%). Each participant completed in a randomly counterbalanced order the same R session in four separated occasions: two under normoxia and two under the corresponding hypoxia condition at each prescribed inter-set rest period. Volume-load (load × set × repetition) was calculated for each training session. Muscle oxygenation (SmO ) of the vastus lateralis was quantified during the back squat exercise. Heart rate (HR) was monitored during training and over the ensuing 30-min post-exercise period. Maximal blood lactate concentration (maxLac) and rating of perceived exertion (RPE) were determined after the exercise and at the end of the recovery period. Volume-load achieved was similar in all environmental conditions and inter-set rest period length did not appreciably affect it. Shorter inter-set rest periods displayed moderate increases in maxLac, HR and RPE responses in all conditions. Compared to HH, NH showed a moderate reduction in the inter-set rest-HR (ES > 0.80), maxLac (ES > 1.01) and SmO (ES > 0.79) at both rest intervals. Results suggest that the reduction in inter-set rest intervals from 120 s to 60 s provide a more potent perceptual, cardiovascular and metabolic stimulus in all environmental conditions, which could maximize hypertrophic adaptations in longer periods of training. The abrupt exposure to a reduced FiO at NH seems to reduce the inter-set recovery capacity during a traditional hypertrophy R session, at least during a single acute exposition. These results cannot be extrapolated to longer training periods.
ISSN:2167-8359
2167-8359
DOI:10.7717/peerj.13469