Muscle fiber typology is associated with the incidence of overreaching in response to overload training

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Bellinger, Phillip
Desbrow, Ben
Derave, Wim
Lievens, Eline
Irwin, Chris
Sabapathy, Surendran
Kennedy, Ben
Craven, Jonathan
Pennell, Evan
Rice, Hal
Minahan, Clare
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2020
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Abstract

The aim of this study was to identify markers of training stress and characteristics of middle-distance runners related to the incidence of overreaching following overload training. Twenty-four highly-trained runners (n=16 male; VO2peak=73.3(4.3) mL·kg·min-1; n=8 female, VO2peak=63.2(3.4) mL·kg·min-1) completed 3 weeks of normal training (NormTr), 3 weeks of high-volume training (HVTr; a 10, 20 and 30% increase in training volume each successive week from NormTr), and a 1-week taper (TapTr; 55% exponential reduction in training volume from HVTr week 3). Before, and immediately after each training period, an incremental treadmill-running test was performed, while resting metabolic rate (RMR), subjective fatigue responses and various resting blood biomarkers were assessed. Muscle fiber typology of the gastrocnemius was estimated by quantification of muscle carnosine using proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy and expressed as a z-score relative to a non-athlete control group. Twelve runners were classified as functionally overreached (FOR) following HVTr (decreased running TTE), whereas the other twelve were classified as acutely fatigued (AF; no decrease in running TTE). The FOR group did not demonstrate systematic alterations in RMR, resting blood biomarkers or submaximal exercise responses compared to the AF group. Gastrocnemius carnosine z-score was significantly higher in FOR (-0.44 ± 0.57) compared to AF (-1.25 ± 0.49, p = 0.004, d = 1.53) and was also associated with changes in running TTE from pre- to post-HVTr (r=-0.55, p=0.005) and pre-HVTr to post-TapTr (r=-0.64, p=0.008). Muscle fiber typology is related to the incidence of overreaching and performance super-compensation following increased training volume and a taper.

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Journal of Applied Physiology

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© 2020 American Physiological Society . This is the author-manuscript version of this paper. Reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the journal website for access to the definitive, published version.

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Biological sciences

Biomedical and clinical sciences

Sports science and exercise

Nutrition and dietetics

Health sciences

FATIGUE MARKERS

MUSCLE FIBER TYPE COMPOSITION

OVERTRAINING

RECOVERY

TRAINING LOAD

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Bellinger, P; Desbrow, B; Derave, W; Lievens, E; Irwin, C; Sabapathy, S; Kennedy, B; Craven, J; Pennell, E; Rice, H; Minahan, C, Muscle fiber typology is associated with the incidence of overreaching in response to overload training, Journal of Applied Physiology, 2020

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