4.6 Article

Effects of high-intensity intermittent priming on physiology and cycling performance

Journal

JOURNAL OF SPORTS SCIENCES
Volume 33, Issue 6, Pages 561-567

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02640414.2014.960882

Keywords

power output; time-trial; warm-up; cyclists; competition

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The pre-event warm-up or priming routine for optimising cycling performance is not well-defined or uniform to a specific event. We aimed to determine the effects of varying the intensity of priming on 3km cycling performance. Ten endurance-trained male cyclists completed four 3km time-trials (TT) on four separate occasions, each preceded by a different priming strategy including self-selected priming and three intermittent priming strategies incorporating 10min of constant-load cycling followed by 5x10s bouts of varying relative intensity (100% and 150% of peak aerobic power, W-peak, and all-out priming). The self-selected priming trial (379 +/- 44W) resulted in similar mean power during the 3km TT to intermittent priming at 100% (376 +/- 45W; -0.7%; unclear) and 150% (374 +/- 48W; -1.5%, unclear) of W-peak, but significantly greater than all-out priming (357 +/- 45W; -5.8%, almost certainly harmful). Differences between intermittent and self-selected priming existed with regards to heart rate (6.2% to 11.5%), blood lactate (-22.9% to 125%) and VO2 kinetics (-22.9% to 8.2%), but these were not related to performance outcomes. In conclusion, prescribed intermittent priming strategies varying in intensity did not substantially improve 3km TT performance compared to self-selected priming.

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