Abstract

At the highest altitude, aerobic work is limited by environmental oxygen availability. We therefore reasoned that the hyperpnea associated with endurance training at altitude should provide a strong stimulus for adaptation of the ventilatory muscles. We measured peak inspiratory muscle pressure-flow characteristics (inspiring through graded resistors) and maximum sustainable ventilation capacity in ten permanent residents of La Paz, Bolivia (3600 m) prior to and immediately following 6 weeks of incremental endurance training. Additionally, eight local residents did no training and functioned as controls for the capacity test. While V O 2 max measured in hypoxia increased by 19% (Favier et al., 1995b. J. Appl Physiol. 78, 2286–2293.), none of the tested ventilatory variables showed significant changes. The values for the group mean slopes of maximum inspiratory pressure-flow pairs (−10.5 vs. −9.8 cm H 2O·sec·L −1, P=0.301; before versus after training, respectively), maximum inspiratory pressure (112.1±8.9 vs. 106.9±8.6 cmH 2O, P=0.163), peak inspiratory flow (9.8±0.41 vs. 10.2±0.55 L·sec −1, P=0.172) and the maximum volitional volume in 12 sec (43.9±2.4 vs. 45.6±2.4 L in 12 sec, P=0.133) were unchanged with exercise training. Likewise, maximal sustainable minute volume was not different between post-training and control subjects (177.4±7.9 vs. 165.4±8.4 L·min −1, P=0.141). These data support the concept that endurance training fails to elicit functional adaptations in ventilatory muscles in humans, even when exercise is done in hypoxia.

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