Abstract

Heart rate drifts upward over time during interval exercise and during exercise in hot conditions. As such, work rate must be lowered to maintain target heart rate. The purpose was to characterize acute work rate adjustments during high-intensity interval training based on target heart rate. Seven humans (three females) completed five study visits: a graded exercise test on a cycle ergometer to measure maximal heart rate (HRmax) in ∼22°C and four trials performed in ∼22°C (TEMP) or ∼35°C (HOT), consisting of an 8 min warm-up at 70% HRmax followed by one (15TEMP and 15HOT) or five (43TEMP and 43HOT) rounds of high-intensity interval training (one round = 4min work at 90% HRmax and 3min recovery at 70% HRmax) totaling 15min or 43min of exercise, respectively. Work rate was lowered 33 ± 20W (p=0.005) in 43TEMP and 56 ± 30W (p=0.003) in 43HOT between the first and fifth work intervals. Thermal strain (0.2°C higher rectal temperature, p=0.01) and cardiovascular strain (6 beats·min-1 larger increase in heart rate from first to fifth recovery interval, p=0.01) were greater in 43HOT versus 43TEMP. Using target heart rate during high-intensity interval training may reduce the training stimulus, especially in hot environments, but it may also limit thermal strain and enable participants to complete the prescribed workout despite the heat.

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