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Title: Heart rate break point may coincide with the anaerobic and not the aerobic threshold. Author: Ribeiro JP, Fielding RA, Hughes V, Black A, Bochese MA, Knuttgen HG. Journal: Int J Sports Med; 1985 Aug; 6(4):220-4. PubMed ID: 4044107. Abstract: Recently, Conconi et al. (4) proposed that the point where heart rate departs from linearity in an incremental exercise test is a good predictor of the aerobic threshold (AeT, i.e., the exercise intensity at which blood lactate concentration increases systematically above resting levels). We hypothesized that this heart rate break point (BrP) is a better predictor of the anaerobic threshold (AnT, i.e., the exercise intensity at which blood lactate concentration shows a rapid rise during an incremental test). To test this hypothesis, 11 subjects with different levels of conditioning were tested on a cycle ergometer using a progressive incremental exercise protocol. Heart rate from EKG tracings and blood samples for lactate determination were taken every minute. The results showed the following significant correlation coefficients when the variables were expressed in watts: AeT and AnT = 0.92; AeT and BrP = 0.89; AnT and BrP = 0.97. The AeT was significantly lower than the BrP (166.4 +/- 52.6 W and 234.5 +/- 69.5 W). There was no significant difference between the AnT and BrP (240.0 +/- 67.1 W and 234.5 +/- 69.5 W). Another group consisting of 16 subjects performed two tests to evaluate the reproducibility of the BrP. Although a ventilatory AnT (defined as a consistent decrease in the fraction of expired CO2) was noted in all the tests, eight subjects failed to demonstrate a BrP in at least one of the evaluations, even though post-exercise blood lactate levels and peak heart rates were consistent with a maximal effort.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]