Purpose: This study investigated the relationship between training-load (TL) metrics and the acute performance decrement (APD) measured immediately after 4 training sessions performed by well-trained runners. Methods: On a treadmill, 12 well-trained runners (10 men and 2 women) performed an incremental test, a baseline time-to-exhaustion (TTE) test at maximal aerobic speed, and 4 randomized training sessions followed by a TTE test to measure APD. The training sessions were matched for external load (60 arbitrary units) but differed in the time spent in the 3 intensity domains. The TL metrics used were based on training impulse, heart-rate variability, ratings of perceived exertion, and the NASA Task Load Index (NASA-TLX) rating scale. Results: TTE was significantly shorter after all the training sessions compared with baseline (P < .001). While APD was higher (+16%, P = .035) for long-duration high-intensity training (HITlong) compared with low-intensity training (LIT), most TL metrics showed higher values (P < .001) in LIT than in HITlong. Conversely, NASA-TLX values were higher (P < .001) in HITlong than in LIT and were significantly associated with APD values (P < .001, β = 0.54). Physiological parameters showed that less time was spent above 90% of V̇O2max during LIT compared with the other training sessions (P < .01), while average respiratory frequency and mean respiratory exchange ratio were higher during HITlong compared to LIT (P < .01). Conclusion: APD was observed after the 4 running training sessions, and it was not associated with most of the TL metrics. Only NASA-TLX was associated with APD, suggesting that this TL metric could be leveraged for training monitoring.

The Relationship Between Training Load and Acute Performance Decrements Following Different Types of Training Sessions in Well-Trained Runners

Nicolò, Andrea;Sacchetti, Massimo;
2025-01-01

Abstract

Purpose: This study investigated the relationship between training-load (TL) metrics and the acute performance decrement (APD) measured immediately after 4 training sessions performed by well-trained runners. Methods: On a treadmill, 12 well-trained runners (10 men and 2 women) performed an incremental test, a baseline time-to-exhaustion (TTE) test at maximal aerobic speed, and 4 randomized training sessions followed by a TTE test to measure APD. The training sessions were matched for external load (60 arbitrary units) but differed in the time spent in the 3 intensity domains. The TL metrics used were based on training impulse, heart-rate variability, ratings of perceived exertion, and the NASA Task Load Index (NASA-TLX) rating scale. Results: TTE was significantly shorter after all the training sessions compared with baseline (P < .001). While APD was higher (+16%, P = .035) for long-duration high-intensity training (HITlong) compared with low-intensity training (LIT), most TL metrics showed higher values (P < .001) in LIT than in HITlong. Conversely, NASA-TLX values were higher (P < .001) in HITlong than in LIT and were significantly associated with APD values (P < .001, β = 0.54). Physiological parameters showed that less time was spent above 90% of V̇O2max during LIT compared with the other training sessions (P < .01), while average respiratory frequency and mean respiratory exchange ratio were higher during HITlong compared to LIT (P < .01). Conclusion: APD was observed after the 4 running training sessions, and it was not associated with most of the TL metrics. Only NASA-TLX was associated with APD, suggesting that this TL metric could be leveraged for training monitoring.
2025
TRIMP
fatigue
heart-rate variability
running
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14244/10025
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