The assessment of heart rate variability (HRV) thresholds (HRVTs) as an alternative of Ventilatory
thresholds (VTs) is a relatively new approach with increasing popularity which has not
been conducted in cross-country (XC) skiing yet. The main purpose of the present study was
to assess HRVTs in the five main XC skiing-related techniques, double poling (DP), diagonal
striding (DS), Nordic walking (NW), V1 skating (V1), and V2 skating (V2).Ten competitive skiers
completed these incremental treadmill tests until exhaustion with a minimum of one to two
recovery days in between each test. Ventilatory gases, HRV and poling frequencies were
measured. The first HRV threshold (HRVT1) was assessed using two time-domain analysis
methods, and the second HRV threshold (HRVT2) was assessed using two non-time varying
frequency-domain analysis methods. HRVT1 was assessed by plotting the mean successive
difference (MSD) and standard deviation (SD) of normalized R-R intervals to workload.
HRVT1 was assessed by plotting high frequency power (HFP) and the HFP relative to respiratory
sinus arrhythmia (HFPRSA) with workload. HRVTs were named after their methods
(HRVT1-SD; HRVT1-MSD; HRVT2-HFP; HRVT2-HFP-RSA). The results showed that the only
cases where the proposed HRVTs were good assessors of VTs were the HRVT1-SD of the
DS test, the HRVT1-MSD of the DS and V2 tests, and the HRVT2-HFP-RSA of the NW test. The
lack of a wider success of the assessment of HRVTs was reasoned to be mostly due to the
high entrainment between the breathing and poling frequencies. As secondary finding, a
novel Cardiolocomotor coupling mode was observed in the NW test. This new Cardiolocoomtor
coupling mode corresponded to the whole bilateral poling cycle instead of corresponding
to each poling action as it was reported to the date by the existing literature.peerReviewe
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