Effects of 8-Week Online, Supervised High-Intensity Interval Training on the Parameters Related to the Anaerobic Threshold, Body Weight, and Body Composition during Pregnancy: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
Hongli YuRita Santos-RochaŁukasz RadzimińskiZbigniew JastrzębskiIwona BonisławskaAndrzej SzwarcAnna SzumilewiczPublished in: Nutrients (2022)
We aimed to assess the effects of an 8-week, online high-intensity interval training (HIIT) program on the parameters related to the anaerobic threshold (AT), body weight, and body composition in pregnant women. A total of 69 Caucasian women with an uncomplicated singleton pregnancy (age: 31 ± 4 years; gestational age: 22 ± 5 weeks; mean ± standard deviation) were randomly allocated to either an 8-week HIIT program (HIIT group) or to a comparative 8-week educational program (EDU group). Our most important finding was that even with the 8-week progression of pregnancy and physiological weight gain, the HIIT group maintained the same level of parameters related to AT: volume of oxygen at the AT (VO 2 /AT), percentage of maximal oxygen uptake at the AT (%VO 2max /AT), and heart rate at the AT (HR/AT). In contrast, in the EDU group we observed a substantial deterioration of parameters related to the AT. The HIIT intervention substantially reduced the fat mass percentage (median: 30 to 28%; p < 0.01) and improved the total fat-free mass percentage (median: 70% to 72%; p < 0.01). In the EDU group, the body composition did not change significantly. An online, supervised HIIT program may be used to prevent the pregnancy-related risk of excessive weight gain and reduction in exercise capacity without yielding adverse obstetric or neonatal outcomes.
Keyphrases
- body composition
- weight gain
- resistance training
- high intensity
- birth weight
- body weight
- gestational age
- heart rate
- preterm birth
- pregnant women
- bone mineral density
- body mass index
- machine learning
- quality improvement
- microbial community
- randomized controlled trial
- magnetic resonance
- physical activity
- adipose tissue
- heart rate variability
- type diabetes
- social media
- metabolic syndrome
- clinical trial
- fatty acid
- health information
- weight loss
- skeletal muscle
- heavy metals