4.4 Article

NO EFFECT OF MENSTRUAL CYCLE PHASE AND ORAL CONTRACEPTIVE USE ON ENDURANCE PERFORMANCE IN ROWERS

Journal

JOURNAL OF STRENGTH AND CONDITIONING RESEARCH
Volume 25, Issue 6, Pages 1571-1578

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1519/JSC.0b013e3181df7fd2

Keywords

female hormones; rowing; aerobic power; oxygen consumption; lactate; anaerobic threshold

Categories

Funding

  1. Estonian Science Foundation [6638]

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Vaiksaar, S, Jurimae, J, Maestu, J, Purge, P, Kalytka, S, Shakhlina, L, and Jurimae, T. No effect of menstrual cycle phase and oral contraceptive use on endurance performance in rowers. J Strength Cond Res 25(6): 1571-1578, 2011-The aim of this study was to examine whether variables commonly used in aerobic exercise testing are influenced by menstrual cycle phases and use of oral contraceptive (OC) in female rowers. Twenty-four eumenorrheic female rowers distinguished on the basis of both menstrual status and athleticism participated in this study and were divided into competitive cyclic athletes (n = 8), recreationally trained cyclic athletes (n = 7), and recreationally trained athletes taking OC pills (ROC; n = 9). Rowers performed 2 incremental tests to voluntary exhaustion on a rowing ergometer during 2 different phases of the menstrual cycle: the follicular phase (FP) and the luteal phase (LP). The study variables were power output (Pa), heart rate (HR), oxygen consumption ((V) over dotO(2)), carbon dioxide production ((V) over dotO(2)), minute ventilation ((V) over dot(E)), the mean respiratory exchange ratio, and ventilatory equivalents of O(2) ((V) over dot(E)/(V) over dotO(2)) and CO(2) ((V) over dot(E)/(V) over dotO(2)), which were measured at maximal and at the aerobic-anaerobic transition intensities. In addition, maximal blood lactate (La) values after the test were obtained. When comparing Pa, (V) over dotO(2), HR, and La values, no significant differences (p > 0.05) between FP and LP at maximal load and at threshold intensity were found in all 3 groups of the rowers studied. However, we observed higher values (p > 0.05) for (V) over dot(E)/(V) over dotCO(2) at both intensities in LP compared with FP in the ROC group. In conclusion, sport-specific endurance performance was not influenced by the phase of the normal menstrual cycle and the synthetic menstrual cycle of the OC users in the rowers studied. Therefore, normally menstruating female rowers and female rowers taking OC pills should not be concerned about the timing of their menstrual cycle with regard to optimized sport-specific endurance performance.

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