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Resumen de Mechanisms for Increases in V[spacing dot above]O2max with Endurance Training in Older and Young Women

Juan M. Murias, John m. Kowalchuk, Donald H. Paterson

  • Purpose: To examine the time course and mechanisms of cardiorespiratory fitness adaptation to training in older (O) and young (Y) women.

    Methods: A total of six O (69 ± 7 yr) and eight Y (25 ± 5 yr) women were examined before training and after 3, 6, 9, and 12 wk of training. Training was performed on a cycle ergometer three times per week for 45 min at ~70% of V?O2max.

    Results: V?O2max (mL·kg-1·min-1) increased within 3 wk, with further changes observed at weeks 6 and 9 in both O (17% ± 14%) and Y and also posttraining (12 wk) in Y (22% ± 6%, P < 0.05). Maximal cardiac output (Q?max, open-circuit acetylene) and stroke volume increased only in Y after 9 wk of training (P < 0.05). Age × testing time interactions in maximal arterial-venous O2 difference (a-vO2diff) after 6 wk of training revealed a greater dependence on a-vO2diff in O compared with Y (P < 0.05); ~65% of the change in V?O2max from pretraining to posttraining was explained by a widened maximal a-vO2diff in O compared with almost equal increases in Q?max and maximal a-vO2diff in Y. The early adaptations (first 3 wk) in O relied exclusively on a nonsignificant increase in Q?max, whereas Y depended on a widened maximal a-vO2diff. Later changes in V?O2max were explained exclusively by an improved maximal a-vO2diff in O and a larger Q?max in Y.

    Conclusions: O and Y women displayed a different time course of training adaptation in V?O2max, with Y (after an initial improvement in maximal a-vO2diff) depending more on changes in Q?max and O mostly relying on a widened maximal a-vO2diff


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