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1 KIHU-Research Institute for Olympic Sports; and 2 Neuromuscular Research Center and Department of Biology of Physical Activity, University of Jyväskylä, SF-40700 Jyväskylä, Finland
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ABSTRACT |
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To investigate
the effects of simultaneous explosive-strength and endurance training
on physical performance characteristics, 10 experimental (E) and 8 control (C) endurance athletes trained for 9 wk. The total training
volume was kept the same in both groups, but 32% of training in E and
3% in C was replaced by explosive-type strength training. A 5-km time
trial (5K), running economy (RE), maximal 20-m speed
(V20 m),
and 5-jump (5J) tests were measured on a track. Maximal anaerobic
(MART) and aerobic treadmill running tests were used to determine
maximal velocity in the MART
(VMART) and
maximal oxygen uptake
(
O2 max).
The 5K time, RE, and
VMART improved
(P < 0.05) in E, but no changes were
observed in C. V20 m and
5J increased in E (P < 0.01) and
decreased in C (P < 0.05).
O2 max increased in C
(P < 0.05), but no changes were
observed in E. In the pooled data, the changes in the 5K velocity
during 9 wk of training correlated (P < 0.05) with the changes in RE [O2 uptake
(r =
0.54)] and
VMART
(r = 0.55). In conclusion, the present
simultaneous explosive-strength and endurance training improved the 5K
time in well-trained endurance athletes without changes in their
O2 max. This
improvement was due to improved neuromuscular characteristics that were
transferred into improved VMART and running economy.
distance running; neuromuscular characteristics; maximal oxygen uptake; maximal anaerobic treadmill running; endurance athletes
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INTRODUCTION |
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ENDURANCE TRAINING ENHANCES the function of the cardiorespiratory system and the oxidative capacity and glycogen stores of the muscles (e.g., Refs. 1, 20). Heavy-resistance strength training results in neural and muscle hypertrophic adaptations that are known to be primarily responsible for improved strength performance (e.g., Refs. 13, 15). A specific type of strength training, explosive-strength training, may lead to specific neural adaptations, such as the increased rate of activation of the motor units, whereas muscle hypertrophy remains much smaller than during typical heavy-resistance strength training (13, 15, 39).
It has been suggested that simultaneous training for both strength and
endurance may be associated with limited strength development during
the later weeks of training, whereas the development of maximal
O2 uptake
(
O2 max) is not
influenced as much (e.g., Refs. 10, 16, 18, 22). These observations are
mainly based on experiments in which heavy-resistance strength training
has predominated and the subjects have been previously untrained. However, proper strength training used simultaneously with endurance training may also result in some improvements in strength performance of endurance athletes (22, 35).
Many endurance-sport events require high aerobic power, and
O2 max is a good
predictor of endurance performance in untrained subjects. However, some
other factors, such as running economy (RE) or peak treadmill
running performance, may be better predictors of endurance
performance than
O2 max
in a homogeneous group of well-trained endurance athletes (e.g., Refs.
4, 6, 30, 32). The endurance athletes must also be able to maintain a relatively high velocity over the course of a race. This emphasizes the
role of neuromuscular characteristics related to voluntary and reflex
neural activation, muscle force and elasticity, and running mechanics
(13) as well as the role of anaerobic characteristics in elite
endurance athletes. Bulbulian et al. (5) and Houmard et al. (21) have
shown that anaerobic characteristics can differentiate well-trained
endurance athletes according to their distance running performance.
Heavy-resistance strength training has improved the endurance
performance of previously untrained subjects (e.g., Refs. 17, 28, 29)
or RE of female distance runners (24) without changes in
O2 max
suggesting that neuromuscular characteristics may also be important for
endurance performance. Consequently, Noakes (31) and Green and Patla
(12) have suggested that
O2 max and
endurance performance may be limited not only by central factors related to O2 uptake
(
O2) but also by so-called
"muscle power" factors affected by an interaction of
neuromuscular and anaerobic characteristics.
In the present study, muscle power is defined as an ability of the
neuromuscular system to produce power during maximal exercise when
glycolytic and/or oxidative energy production are high and muscle
contractility may be limited. Peak velocity
reached during the
O2 max treadmill
running test has been shown to be a good indicator of endurance
performance in middle- and long-distance running events (e.g., Refs. 4,
31, 32). Noakes (31) has suggested that
could also be used as a measure of the muscle power factor in endurance
runners. However, in addition to the neuromuscular and anaerobic
characteristics, the aerobic processes are also strongly involved in
(e.g., Ref. 19). Recently, it has been suggested that peak
velocity in the maximal anaerobic running test
(VMART), which
is influenced both by the anaerobic power and capacity and by the
neuromuscular characteristics without the influence of
O2 max could be used as
a measure of muscle power (38).
The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of simultaneous explosive-strength and endurance training on 5-km running performance, aerobic power, RE, selected neuromuscular characteristics, and muscle power in well-trained endurance athletes.
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METHODS |
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Subjects.
The experimental (E) group consisted of 12 and the control (C) group of
10 elite male cross-country runners (orienteers), and the groups were
matched with regard to
O2 max and
5-km time trial. During the study period, two E and two C athletes were excluded because of injuries or illness. The physical characteristics of both groups before and after the experimental period are presented in Table 1. The percentage of body fat was
estimated from the thickness of four skinfolds (triceps brachii, biceps
brachii, subscapula, and suprailium) (11). The right calf and thigh
girths were measured with a tape applied around the relaxed muscles. This study was approved by the Ethics Committee of the University of
Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä, Finland.
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Training.
The experimental training period lasted for 9 wk and was carried out
after the competition season. The total training volume was the same in
both E and C groups (8.4 ± 1.7 h and 9 ± 2 times/wk and 9.2 ± 1.9 h and 8 ± 2 times/wk, respectively), but 32% of training
hours in the E group and 3% in the C group were replaced by
sport-specific explosive-strength training. The rest of the training in
both groups was endurance training and circuit training (Fig.
1). Explosive-strength training sessions
lasted for 15-90 min and consisted of various sprints
(5-10) · (20-100 m) and jumping exercises
[alternative jumps, bilateral countermovement, drop and hurdle
jumps, and 1-legged, 5-jump (5J) tests] without additional weight
or with the barbell on the shoulders and leg-press and knee
extensor-flexor exercises with low loads but high or maximal movement
velocities (30-200 contractions/training session and 5-20
repetitions/set). The load of the exercises ranged between 0 and 40%
of the one-repetition maximum. Endurance training of both groups
consisted of cross-country or road running for 0.5-2.0 h at the
intensity below (84%) or above (16%) the individual lactate threshold
(LT). Circuit training was similar in both groups; the C group trained
more often than did the E group, and training consisted of specific
abdominal and leg exercises with dozens of repetitions at slow movement
velocity and without any external load.
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Measurements.
The E and C groups were examined before training and after 3, 6, and 9 wk of training, except for the 5-km time trial (5K), which was only
performed before and after 6 and 9 wk of training. The schedule of two
measurement days is seen in Table 2. On the first day, after the anthropometric measurements and a warm-up, the
maximal isometric force of the leg extensor muscles was measured on an
electromechanical dynamometer (15). Three to five maximal isometric
contractions were performed at the knee and hip angles of 110°. The
force in each contraction was recorded by a microcomputer (Toshiba
T3200 SX) by using an AT Codas analog-to-digital converter card (Dataq
Instruments).
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O2 max and LT were
determined during the maximal aerobic power test on a treadmill. The
initial velocity and inclination were 2.22 m/s and 1°,
respectively. The velocity was increased by 0.28 m/s after every 3-min
stage until the velocity of 4.75 m/s was reached, except for two
velocity increases of 0.56 m/s in the middle of the test. After 4.75 m/s was reached, the velocity was kept constant but the inclination was
increased by 1° every minute until exhaustion. Fingertip blood
samples were taken after each velocity to determine blood lactate
concentrations by an enzymatic-electrode method (EBIO 6666, Eppendorf-Netheler-Hinz). Ventilation and
O2 for every 30-s period
were measured by using a portable telemetric
O2 analyzer (Cosmed K2) (7). The
LT as
O2
(ml · kg
1 · min
1)
was determined at the point at which blood lactate concentration distinctly increased from its baseline of 1-2 mmol/l (2, 23) and
was verified by using respiratory data (2, 40).
O2 max was taken as the highest mean of two consecutive 30-s
O2 measurements (ml · kg
1 · min
1).
Because the inclination of the treadmill was increased and the velocity
was kept constant during the last stages of the test, peak treadmill
running performance was calculated not as the peak velocity
but as the O2 demand of running
during the last minute before exhaustion
(
O2 max,demand)
by using the formula of the American College of Sports Medicine (1991)
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O2 during the runs was
measured by using the portable telemetric
O2 analyzer (Cosmed K2) and track
RE was calculated as a steady-state
O2
(ml · kg
1 · min
1)
during the last minute of running at the 3.67 and 4.17 m/s velocities.
Ten minutes after the RE test, the subjects performed the 5K on the
200-m indoor track. The mean velocity of the 5K
(V5K) was
calculated. At the beginning of the 5K and after running 2.5 and 4 km,
all subjects ran one 200-m constant-velocity lap (CVL) at the 4.55 m/s
velocity through the photocell gates. The velocity of the CVLs was
guided by the lamp speed-control system. The CVLs were run over a
special 9.4-m-long force-platform system, which consisted of five two-
and three three-dimensional force plates (0.9/1.0 m, TR Testi, natural
frequency in the vertical direction 170 Hz) and one Kistler
three-dimensional force platform (0.9/0.9 m, 400 Hz, Honeycomb,
Kistler, Switzerland) connected in series and covered with a tartan
mat. Each force plate registered both vertical
(Fz) and horizontal
(Fy) components of the ground
reaction force. Fz,
Fy, and contact times (CT) were
recorded by a microcomputer (Toshiba T3200 SX) by using an AT Codas
analog-to-digital converter card (Dataq Instruments) with a sampling
frequency of 500 Hz. Stride rates (SR) were calculated by using CTs and
flight times (FT) [1/(CT + FT)] and stride lengths by using
velocity and SRs (V/SR). Each run
included four to six contacts on the force-platform system. The
horizontal force-time curve was used to separate the CT and
Fz and
Fy force components into the
braking and the propulsion phases. The integrals of both force-time
curves were calculated and divided by the respective time period to
obtain the average force for the whole contact phase and for the
braking and propulsion phases separately.
Statistical methods. Means and SDs were calculated by standard methods, and Pearson correlation coefficients were used to evaluate the relationships among the variables. The significance of changes between the test values and differences within the E and C groups were tested by multiple analysis of variance for repeated measures (MANOVA). If a significant F-value was observed, Student's t-test was used to identify differences within groups. Because of slight initial group differences, analysis of covariance by using the pretest values as the covariate was employed to determine significant differences between the posttest adjusted means in the E group and those in the C group.
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RESULTS |
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The 5K time did not differ significantly between the groups before the
experiment, but, according to analysis of covariance, E and C group 5K
times were different (P < 0.05)
after training. Significant group-by-training interaction was found in
the 5K time after 9 wk of training. It decreased
(P < 0.05) during the training
period in E group, whereas no changes were observed in the C group
(Fig. 2). During the CVLs of the 5K, the
CTs decreased in the E group (P < 0.001) and increased in the C group (P < 0.05) during the training period (Fig.
3). Significant differences
(P < 0.001) were observed in
adjusted mean CTs of CVLs between the E and C group after training. No
significant differences or changes during the training period were
observed in either the E or C group in the ground reaction forces, SRs,
or stride lengths of CVLs during the 5K.
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RE, VMART, and
O2 max,demand
did not differ between the groups before the experiment, but after 9 wk
of training, adjusted RE (P < 0.001)
and VMART
(P < 0.01) in the E and C groups
were different. Significant group-by-training interaction was found in
RE and VMART after the training
period, and RE, VMART, as well as
O2 max,demand,
improved (P < 0.05) in the E group, whereas no changes
were observed in the C group (Table 3 and
Figs. 4 and
5). Significant group-by-training
interaction (P < 0.05) was also
found in
O2 max after 9 wk of training, with an increase in the C group
(P < 0.01) and no change in the E
group (Table 3). No significant changes or differences were found in
either the E or C group in the LT during the training period (Table 3).
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Maximal isometric force of the leg extensor muscles,
V20 m, and
5J did not differ significantly between the E and C groups before the
experiment, but analysis of covariance showed significant (P < 0.01) differences after 9 wk of
training (Table 4). Maximal isometric force
tended to increase in the E group and to decrease in the C group during
the training period. The changes were not statistically significant,
but a significant group-by-training interaction was found in maximal
isometric force (Table 4).
V20 m and
5J increased in the E group by 3.6-4.7%
(P < 0.01) and decreased in the C
group by 1.7-2.4% (P < 0.05)
after 9 wk of training, and significant group-by-training interactions
were observed as well (Table 4).
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The correlation analysis of pooled data showed that the improvement in
the V5K
correlated significantly (P < 0.05) with the improvement in
(r = 0.63), RE (expressed as
O2,
ml · kg
1 · min
1)
(r =
0.54), and
VMART
(r = 0.55). The correlation
coefficient between the changes in
O2 max and in the
V5K was negative
(r =
0.52,
P < 0.05). The improvements in RE
and VMART
correlated with each other (r =
0.65, P < 0.01) and
were associated (P < 0.05) with
increases in
(r =
0.62 and 0.64), 5J
(r =
0.63 and 0.68), and
V20 m
(r =
0.49 and 0.69), respectively.
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DISCUSSION |
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It has been shown (36) that adult endurance athletes who continue their
endurance training for several years seem to reach a more or less
apparent ceiling of
O2 max and
endurance performance. Some previous training studies (17, 28, 29) have
found that strength training may lead to improved endurance performance
in previously untrained subjects. The present study showed that
simultaneous sport-specific explosive-strength and endurance training
may also improve 5-km running performance (and peak treadmill running
performance, i.e.,
of well-trained male endurance athletes. The mechanism of this improvement is suggested to be related to an
explosive-strength-training effect: neuromuscular characteristics
measured by
V20 m, 5J,
and CTs of CVLs were improved and transferred into improved muscle power (VMART)
and RE.
The present 9-wk explosive-type strength training resulted in considerable improvements in selected neuromuscular characteristics, although a large volume of endurance training was performed concomitantly. This was demonstrated by the significant improvements in V20 m and 5J and by the shortening of the CTs during the CVLs of the 5K, whereas no changes were observed in the ground reaction forces or maximal force of the trained muscles. These results support our previous findings (35) that in well-trained endurance athletes training-induced improvements in neuromuscular characteristics may not be fully inhibited by simultaneous explosive-strength and endurance training.
It has been suggested (3, 26) that the nervous system plays an important role in regulating muscle stiffness and utilization of muscle elasticity during stretch-shortening cycle exercises, in which high contraction velocities are used. The present increases in neuromuscular performance characteristics might primarily be due to neural adaptations, although no electromyographic measurements in the muscles were done to support this suggestion. Although the loads used in the present explosive-strength training were low, the muscles are known to be highly activated because of the maximal movement velocity utilized (13). It has been shown that this type of explosive-strength training results in increases in the amount of neural input to the muscles observable during rapid dynamic and isometric actions (e.g., Refs. 14, 15), suggesting that the increase in net excitation of motoneurons could result from increased excitatory input, reduced inhibitory input, or both (39). It is likely that training-induced alterations in neural control during stretch-shortening cycle exercises such as running and jumping may take place in both voluntary activation and inhibitory and/or facilitatory reflexes (13, 25, 26, 39). Although neural activation of the trained muscles during explosive-type strength training is very high, the time of this activation during each single muscle action is usually so short that training-induced muscular hypertrophy and maximal strength development take place to a drastically smaller degree than during typical heavy-resistance training (13). Consequently, it has been suggested (35) that, during relatively short training periods of some weeks, the improvements in sprinting and/or explosive-force-production capacity, especially in endurance athletes, might primarily come from neural adaptations without observable muscle hypertrophy (see also Refs. 17, 18). The finding that no changes took place in the circumferences of the calf and thigh muscles in our endurance athletes during the present training period supports this suggestion.
The rationale for this study was based on the hypothesis (see Fig.
6) that endurance performance and peak
treadmill running performance are influenced not only by aerobic power
and RE but also by the so-called muscle power factor, which is related
to neuromuscular and anaerobic characteristics (e.g., Refs. 12, 31).
This hypothesis is supported by the present findings that the
correlation between the improvements in
V5K and in
were associated with the changes in both RE and
VMART. An
interesting finding that supports the muscle power factor was that,
although the improvements in the neuromuscular characteristics
(V20 m, 5J,
CTs of CVLs) did not correlate directly with the changes in 5-km
running performance, they correlated with
VMART, which was associated with improved
V5K. During both
the MART and 5K, the athletes had to use their neuromuscular
characteristics when
O2 and
blood lactate concentration were considerably increased over resting
values. Previous studies have shown that during fatigued conditions an
increased H+ concentration, which
is related to the increased blood lactate concentration during the
present 5K running, impairs the contractile propertiers of the muscles
(e.g., Ref. 27). Moreover, during middle-distance running and uphill
cross-country skiing, for example, energy expenditure may exceed
maximal aerobic power and the athletes must be able to maintain a
relatively high velocity over the course of a race although their
muscle and blood lactate concentrations are high (9, 33; see also Ref.
38). This further emphasizes the importance of the muscle power factor
(the ability of the neuromuscular system to produce power during
maximal exercise when glycolytic and/or oxidative energy production are
high and muscle contractility may be limited) in endurance sports (38).
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The improvements in 5-km running performance by the present E group of
athletes took place without changes in their
O2 max or LT.
Interestingly, even a negative correlation was observed between the
individual changes in
O2 max and the changes
in 5K velocity. The present C group showed increased
O2 max but did not
demonstrate changes in 5-km running performance. Furthermore, VMART did not
correlate with
O2 max. All
these results support the hypothesis of Noakes (31) and some other
researchers (e.g., Ref. 12) that endurance performance may be limited
not only by central factors related to
O2 max but also by the
muscle power factor.
The improved neuromuscular characteristics of the present E athletes were related to both VMART and RE. Improvements in V20 m, 5J, and CTs of the CVLs correlated with the improvement in VMART during the training period. These results support the observation by Nummela et al. (34) that training utilizing various jumping and sprinting exercises with high contraction velocities and reaction forces results in increases in stretch-shortening cycle exercises such as sprint running and also allows improvements in VMART. Moreover, these results are in line with previous observations that VMART is influenced by the interaction of neuromuscular and anaerobic characteristics and that VMART can be used as a measure of muscle power (37, 38).
Another possible mechanism for the improvement in the 5-km running
performance seemed to be related to RE. It has been reported (24) that
heavy-resistance strength training improved RE of female distance
runners. The importance of the neuromuscular characteristics in
determining RE and thereby running performance has recently been
pointed out also by Dalleau et al. (8). They showed that the energy
cost of running is significantly related to the stiffness of the
propulsive leg, which is also demonstrated by the present decrease in
the CTs of CVLs and increase in
V20 m and
5J in the E group. It has been suggested (9) that the 5% decrease in the energy cost of running explains an improvement in the distance running performance time of ~3.8%. This is in line with the results of the present study, in which RE and 5K time of the E group improved by 8.1 and 3.1%, respectively, and no changes in
O2 max were observed.
Furthermore, the present correlations between the improvements in the
neuromuscular characteristics and RE were statistically significant.
All these findings, together with the relationship between the
improvement in
V5K and RE,
suggest that explosive-strength training had a positive influence on RE
and running performance because of the improved neuromuscular
characteristics. However, RE at race pace is different from that at
submaximal running velocity. The significant correlation between RE and
VMART suggests
that muscle power may influence RE both at submaximal velocities and most probably at race pace.
In conclusion, simultaneous explosive-strength training, including
sprinting and endurance training, produced a significant improvement in
the 5-km running performance by well-trained endurance athletes without
changes in
O2 max or
other aerobic power variables. This improvement is suggested to be due
to improved neuromuscular characteristics that were transferred into
improved muscle power and RE.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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The authors thank Margareetta Tummavuori, Matti Salonen, and Harri Mononen for technical assistance and data analysis.
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FOOTNOTES |
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This study was supported in part by grants from the Finnish Ministry of Education.
The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: L. Paavolainen, KIHU-Research Institute for Olympic Sports, Rautpohjankatu 6, SF-40700 Jyväskylä, Finland (E-mail: LPAAVOLA{at}KIHU.JYU.FI).
Received 16 March 1998; accepted in final form 4 January 1999.
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