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    Influence of muscle fibre type and pedal rate on the VO2-work rate slope during ramp exercise

    Jones, Andrew M., Campbell, Iain T. and Pringle, Jamie S.M. (2004) Influence of muscle fibre type and pedal rate on the VO2-work rate slope during ramp exercise. European Journal of Applied Physiology, 91 (2-3). pp. 238-245. ISSN 1439-6319

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    Abstract

    We hypothesised that the ratio between the increase in oxygen uptake and the increase in work rate (ΔVO2/WR) during ramp cycle exercise would be significantly related to the percentage type II muscle fibres at work rates above the gas exchange threshold (GET) where type II fibres are presumed to be active. We further hypothesised that ramp exercise at higher pedal rates, which would be expected to increase the proportional contribution of type II fibres to the total power delivered, would increase the DeltaVO2/DeltaWR slope at work rates above the GET. Fourteen healthy subjects [four female; mean (SD): age 25 (3) years, body mass 74.3 (15.1) kg] performed a ramp exercise test to exhaustion (25 W min–1) at a pedal rate of 75 rev min–1, and consented to a muscle biopsy of the vastus lateralis. Eleven of the subjects also performed two further ramp tests at pedal rates of 35 and 115 rev min–1. The ΔVO2/ΔWR slope for exercise <GET (S 1) was significantly correlated with VO2 peak in ml kg–1 min–1 (r=0.60; P<0.05), whereas the ΔVO2/ΔWR slope for exercise >GET (S 2) was significantly correlated to percentage type II fibres (r=0.54; P=0.05). The ratio between the ΔVO2/ΔWR slopes for exercise above and below the GET (S 2/S 1) was significantly greater at the pedal rate of 115 rev min–1 [1.22 (0.09)] compared to pedal rates of 35 rev min–1 [0.96 (0.02)] and 75 rev min–1 [1.09 (0.05), (P<0.05)]. The greater increase in S 2 relative to S 1 in subjects (1) with a high percentage type II fibres, and (2) at a high pedal rate, suggests that a greater recruitment of type II fibres contributes in some manner to the xs VO2 observed during ramp exercise.

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