Four-week experimental plus 1-week taper period using live high train low does not alter muscle glycogen content.
Danilo R BertucciCarlos Dellavechia de CarvalhoPedro P M ScariotCarlos A Kalva-FilhoGabriel Luches-PereiraTarine B ArrudaIsabela S AlvesCamila B GardimMarcelo CastigliaMarcelo RibertoClaudio Alexandre GobattoMarcelo PapotiPublished in: European journal of applied physiology (2024)
This study aimed to investigate the effects of a 4-week live high train low (LHTL; FiO 2 ~ 13.5%), intervention, followed by a tapering phase, on muscle glycogen concentration. Fourteen physically active males (28 ± 6 years, 81.6 ± 15.4 kg, 179 ± 5.2 cm) were divided into a control group (CON; n = 5), and the group that performed the LHTL, which was exposed to hypoxia (LHTL; n = 9). The subjects trained using a one-legged knee extension exercise, which enabled four experimental conditions: leg training in hypoxia (TL HYP ); leg control in hypoxia (CL HYP , n = 9); leg trained in normoxia (TL NOR , n = 5), and leg control in normoxia (CL NOR , n = 5). All participants performed 18 training sessions lasting between 20 and 45 min [80-200% of intensity corresponding to the time to exhaustion (TTE) reached in the graded exercise test]. Additionally, participants spent approximately 10 h day -1 in either a normobaric hypoxic environment (14.5% FiO 2 ; ~ 3000 m) or a control condition (i.e., staying in similar tents on ~ 530 m). Thereafter, participants underwent a taper protocol consisting of six additional training sessions with a reduced training load. SpO 2 was lower, and the hypoxic dose was higher in LHTL compared to CON (p < 0.001). After 4 weeks, glycogen had increased significantly only in the TL NOR and TL HYP groups and remained elevated after the taper (p < 0.016). Time to exhaustion in the LHTL increased after both the 4-week training period and the taper compared to the baseline (p < 0.001). Although the 4-week training promoted substantial increases in muscle glycogen content, TTE increased in LHTL condition.