Abstract
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of a microcycle of high-intensity interval training (HIT) sessions with multiple short work intervals followed by an active recovery period, compared to a similar duration of regular training, on determinants and indicators of endurance performance in well-trained cyclists. The participants in the BLOCK group performed a 6-day HIT microcycle including five HIT sessions (5×8.75-min 30/15s short intervals) followed by a 6-day active recovery period with reduced training load, while the regular training group (REG) performed 12days of their regular training, including four HIT sessions. Physiological testing was performed before and after the training periods. From pre- to post- intervention, BLOCK demonstrated significantly larger improvements than REG in mean power output (PO) during the last min of the maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max) test (POVO2max) (3.7 vs. 0.7%, p=0.009, and effect size (ES)=1.00) and mean PO during the 10-s sprint (2.8 vs. 1.9%, p=0.028, and ES=0.63). No significant differences between BLOCK and REG were observed for VO2max, PO at 4mmol·L-1 [blood lactate] (PO4mmol), 15-min maximal mean power output (PO15-min), and gross efficiency (p=0.156-0.919). However, there was a tendency for larger improvements in the performance index (calculated from the main performance indicators POVO2max, PO4mmol, and PO15-min) in BLOCK compared to REG (2.9% vs. 1.2%, p=0.079, and ES=0.71). A 6-day high-intensity short-interval microcycle followed by a 6-day active recovery period induces improvements in endurance performance indicators compared to regular training, demonstrating its potential as an efficient strategy for endurance training in well-trained cyclists.
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