Functional and Morphological Adaptations in the Heart of Children Aged 12-14 Years following Two Different Endurance Training Protocols.
Lefteris RafailakisCharikleia K DeliIoannis G FatourosAthanasios TsiokanosDimitrios DraganidisAthanasios PouliosDimitrios SoulasAthanasios Z JamurtasPublished in: Sports (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
This study investigated the cardiac functional and the morphological adaptations because of two endurance training protocols. Untrained children (N = 30, age: 12-14 years) were divided into three groups (N = 10/group). The first group did not perform any session (CONTROL), the second performed ventilatory threshold endurance training (VTT) for 12 weeks (2 sessions/week) at an intensity corresponding to the ventilatory threshold (VT) and the third (IT) performed two sessions per week at 120% of maximal oxygen uptake (VO 2 max). Two other sessions (30 min running at 55-65% of VO 2 max) per week were performed in VVT and IT. Echocardiograms (Left Ventricular end Diastolic Diameter, LVEDd; Left Ventricular end Diastolic Volume, LVEDV; Stroke Volume, SV; Ejection Fraction, EF; Posterior Wall Thickness of the Left Ventricle, PWTLV) and cardiopulmonary ergospirometry (VO 2 max, VT, velocity at VO 2 max (vVO 2 max), time in vVO 2 max until exhaustion (Tlim) was conducted before and after protocols. Significant increases were observed in both training groups in LVEDd (VTT = 5%; IT = 3.64%), in LVEDV (VTT = 23.7%; ITT = 13.6%), in SV (VTT = 25%; IT = 16.9%) but not in PWTLV and EF, after protocols. No differences were noted in the CONTROL group. VO 2 max and VT increased significantly in both training groups by approximately 9% after training. Our results indicate that intensity endurance training does not induce meaningful functional and morphological perturbations in the hearts of children.
Keyphrases
- high intensity
- left ventricular
- ejection fraction
- resistance training
- virtual reality
- heart failure
- skeletal muscle
- aortic stenosis
- blood pressure
- young adults
- clinical trial
- coronary artery
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- pulmonary arterial hypertension
- blood brain barrier
- preterm birth
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- transcranial direct current stimulation
- atomic force microscopy