Contemporary Periodization of Altitude Training for Elite Endurance Athletes: A Narrative Review

被引:85
作者
Mujika, Inigo [1 ,2 ]
Sharma, Avish P. [3 ,4 ]
Stellingwerff, Trent [5 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Univ Basque Country, Fac Med & Odontol, Dept Physiol, Leioa, Basque Country, Spain
[2] Univ Finis Terrae, Fac Med, Sch Kinesiol, Exercise Sci Lab, Santiago, Chile
[3] Griffith Univ, Sch Allied Hlth Sci, Griffith Sports Physiol & Performance, Gold Coast, Qld, Australia
[4] Triathlon Australia, Burleigh Heads, Qld, Australia
[5] Canadian Sport Inst Pacific, Victoria, BC, Canada
[6] Univ Victoria, Dept Exercise Sci Phys & Hlth Educ, Victoria, BC, Canada
关键词
INCREASED HEMOGLOBIN MASS; DIETARY NITRATE SUPPLEMENTATION; RESTING METABOLIC-RATE; SEA-LEVEL PERFORMANCE; MAXIMAL OXYGEN-UPTAKE; EXERCISE PERFORMANCE; HEAT ACCLIMATION; INTERMITTENT HYPOXIA; RUNNING PERFORMANCE; NORMOBARIC HYPOXIA;
D O I
10.1007/s40279-019-01165-y
中图分类号
G8 [体育];
学科分类号
04 ; 0403 ;
摘要
Since the 1960s there has been an escalation in the purposeful utilization of altitude to enhance endurance athletic performance. This has been mirrored by a parallel intensification in research pursuits to elucidate hypoxia-induced adaptive mechanisms and substantiate optimal altitude protocols (e.g., hypoxic dose, duration, timing, and confounding factors such as training load periodization, health status, individual response, and nutritional considerations). The majority of the research and the field-based rationale for altitude has focused on hematological outcomes, where hypoxia causes an increased erythropoietic response resulting in augmented hemoglobin mass. Hypoxia-induced non-hematological adaptations, such as mitochondrial gene expression and enhanced muscle buffering capacity may also impact athletic performance, but research in elite endurance athletes is limited. However, despite significant scientific progress in our understanding of hypobaric hypoxia (natural altitude) and normobaric hypoxia (simulated altitude), elite endurance athletes and coaches still tend to be trailblazers at the coal face of cutting-edge altitude application to optimize individual performance, and they already implement novel altitude training interventions and progressive periodization and monitoring approaches. Published and field-based data strongly suggest that altitude training in elite endurance athletes should follow a long- and short-term periodized approach, integrating exercise training and recovery manipulation, performance peaking, adaptation monitoring, nutritional approaches, and the use of normobaric hypoxia in conjunction with terrestrial altitude. Future research should focus on the long-term effects of accumulated altitude training through repeated exposures, the interactions between altitude and other components of a periodized approach to elite athletic preparation, and the time course of non-hematological hypoxic adaptation and de-adaptation, and the potential differences in exercise-induced altitude adaptations between different modes of exercise.
引用
收藏
页码:1651 / 1669
页数:19
相关论文
共 164 条
  • [51] Induction and Decay of Short-Term Heat Acclimation in Moderately and Highly Trained Athletes
    Garrett, Andrew T.
    Rehrer, Nancy J.
    Patterson, Mark J.
    [J]. SPORTS MEDICINE, 2011, 41 (09) : 757 - 771
  • [52] Time course of the hemoglobin mass response to natural altitude training in elite endurance cyclists
    Garvican, L.
    Martin, D.
    Quod, M.
    Stephens, B.
    Sassi, A.
    Gore, C.
    [J]. SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF MEDICINE & SCIENCE IN SPORTS, 2012, 22 (01) : 95 - 103
  • [53] Intravenous Iron Does Not Augment the Hemoglobin Mass Response to Simulated Hypoxia
    Garvican-Lewis, Laura A.
    Vuong, Victor L.
    Govus, Andrew D.
    Peeling, Peter
    Jung, Grace
    Nemeth, Elizabeta
    Hughes, David
    Lovell, Greg
    Eichner, Daniel
    Gore, Christopher J.
    [J]. MEDICINE AND SCIENCE IN SPORTS AND EXERCISE, 2018, 50 (08) : 1669 - 1678
  • [54] Time for a new metric for hypoxic dose?
    Garvican-Lewis, Laura A.
    Sharpe, Ken
    Gore, Christopher J.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 2016, 121 (01) : 352 - 355
  • [55] Goodrich Jesse A, 2018, Sports Med Int Open, V2, pE98, DOI 10.1055/a-0655-7207
  • [56] Gore C J, 1998, J Sci Med Sport, V1, P156, DOI 10.1016/S1440-2440(98)80011-X
  • [57] Altitude training and haemoglobin mass from the optimised carbon monoxide rebreathing method determined by a meta-analysis
    Gore, Christopher J.
    Sharpe, Ken
    Garvican-Lewis, Laura A.
    Saunders, Philo U.
    Humberstone, Clare E.
    Robertson, Eileen Y.
    Wachsmuth, Nadine B.
    Clark, Sally A.
    McLean, Blake D.
    Friedmann-Bette, Birgit
    Neya, Mitsuo
    Pottgiesser, Torben
    Schumacher, Yorck O.
    Schmidt, Walter F.
    [J]. BRITISH JOURNAL OF SPORTS MEDICINE, 2013, 47 : 31 - +
  • [58] Nonhematological mechanisms of improved sea-level performance after hypoxic exposure
    Gore, Christopher John
    Clark, Sally A.
    Saunders, Philo U.
    [J]. MEDICINE AND SCIENCE IN SPORTS AND EXERCISE, 2007, 39 (09) : 1600 - 1609
  • [59] Increased arterial desaturation in trained cyclists during maximal exercise at 580 m altitude
    Gore, CJ
    Hahn, AG
    Scroop, GC
    Watson, DB
    Norton, KI
    Wood, RJ
    Campbell, DP
    Emonson, DL
    [J]. JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 1996, 80 (06) : 2204 - 2210
  • [60] The Effects of Injury and Illness on Haemoglobin Mass
    Gough, C. E.
    Sharpe, K.
    Garvican, L. A.
    Anson, J. M.
    Saunders, P. U.
    Gore, C. J.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SPORTS MEDICINE, 2013, 34 (09) : 763 - 769