The effect of intermittent sequential pneumatic compression on recovery between exercise bouts in well-trained triathletes

Journal Title: Journal of Science and Cycling - Year 2015, Vol 4, Issue 3

Abstract

To evaluate the effectiveness of one method of intermittent sequential pneumatic compression (ISPC) on the recovery between exercise bouts in well-trained triathletes. Ten well-trained male triathletes (mean ± SD; age = 29 ± 9 y, mass = 72kg ± 11kg) completed a familiarization trial and two experimental trials in a randomized, cross-over design. Participants performed a 40-minute high-intensity interval session on a cycle ergometer, followed by a 30- minute recovery period where participants completed either passive recovery (CON) or ISPC recovery. Following the recovery period, participants performed a 5km run time-trial on a treadmill (5kmTT). Blood lactate concentration, 5kmTT time and total quality recovery (TQR) were used to examine the effect of ISPC compared to CON. The 5kmTT resulted in a non-significant difference (P = 0.31, ES = 0.07) between groups of 8.2 ± 23.7 seconds in favour of the ISPC trial (ISPC; 1189.7 ± 94.9 and CON; 1197.9 ± 101.9). There were no significant differences between trials for blood lactate concentrations or TQR. The current study reports that ISPC was not effective in improving recovery between a cycling and running bout in well-trained triathletes.

Authors and Affiliations

Shannon O'Donnell| University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand, Matthew W Driller| University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand

Keywords

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  • EP ID EP2950
  • DOI -
  • Views 522
  • Downloads 115

How To Cite

Shannon O'Donnell, Matthew W Driller (2015). The effect of intermittent sequential pneumatic compression on recovery between exercise bouts in well-trained triathletes. Journal of Science and Cycling, 4(3), 19-23. https://europub.co.uk./articles/-A-2950