4.6 Article

The influence of 2 weeks of low-volume high-intensity interval training on health outcomes in adolescent boys

Journal

JOURNAL OF SPORTS SCIENCES
Volume 32, Issue 8, Pages 757-765

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02640414.2013.853132

Keywords

youth; lipid oxidation; aerobic fitness; blood pressure; trainability; BMI

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The present study aimed to establish whether 2 weeks of high-intensity interval training would have a beneficial effect on aerobic fitness, fat oxidation, blood pressure and body mass index (BMI) in healthy adolescent boys. Ten adolescent boys (15.1 +/- 0.3 years, 1.3 +/- 0.2 years post-estimated peak height velocity) completed six sessions of Wingate-style high-intensity interval training over a 2-week period. The first session consisted of four sprints with training progressed to seven sprints in the final session. High-intensity interval training had a beneficial effect on maximal O-2 uptake (mean change, +/- 90% confidence intervals: 0.19 L center dot min(-1), +/- 0.19, respectively), on the O-2 uptake at the gas exchange threshold (0.09 L center dot min(-1), +/- 0.13) and on the O-2 cost of sub-maximal exercise (-0.04 L center dot min(-1), +/- 0.04). A beneficial effect on the contribution of lipid (0.06 g center dot min(-1), +/- 0.06) and carbohydrate (-0.23 g center dot min(-1), +/- 0.14) oxidation was observed during sub-maximal exercise, but not for the maximal rate of fat oxidation (0.04 g center dot min(-1), +/- 0.08). Systolic blood pressure (1mmHg, +/- 4) and BMI (0.1 kg center dot m(2), +/- 0.1) were not altered following training. These data demonstrate that meaningful changes in health outcomes are possible in healthy adolescent boys after just six sessions of high-intensity interval training over a 2-week period.

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