Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Acute heat exposure increases high-intensity performance during sprint cycle exercise.

The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of acute heat exposure at thermal balance on high-intensity performance during sprint cycle exercise. Nine healthy male subjects were tested in three different, well-controlled environments in an environmental chamber: T (22 degrees C, 65% RH), H1 (30 degrees C, 55% RH) and H2 (35 degrees C, 62% RH), each test being carried out on a different day following a randomized sequence. After 30 min of exposure to the set environment, subjects performed the 30-s sprint cycle exercise. Heart rate, rectal and skin temperatures were measured prior to exercise, at rest, before and after environmental exposure, and after exercise. There were no differences in subjects' core temperature or heart rate prior to exercise. However, skin temperature was significantly higher in hot trials compared with the control throughout the experimental session (P < 0.05). Peak power was significantly higher in the hot environments compared with the control. Mean power was higher only in H2 compared with T (P < 0.05). This difference in power output was the consequence of a faster pedaling cadence in the hot trials (P < 0.05). Plasma ammonia was higher in the hot trials versus control at 4 min post-sprint. No differences in blood lactate levels at 3 min post-sprint were observed between tests. The results of this study suggest that the exposure to hot environment caused an improvement in power output for a single 30-s sprint. This increase in power output was associated with an elevation in plasma ammonia suggestive of an increase in adenine nucleotide loss.

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