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    Skeletal muscle fatigue precedes the slow component of oxygen uptake kinetics during exercise in humans

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    During constant work rate (CWR) exercise above the lactate threshold (LT), the exponential kinetics of oxygen uptake () are supplemented by a slow component () which reduces work efficiency. This has been hypothesised to result from ‘fatigue and recruitment’, where muscle fatigue during supra-LT exercise elicits recruitment of additional, but poorly efficient, fibres to maintain power production. To test this hypothesis we characterised changes in the power–velocity relationship during sub- and supra-LT cycle ergometry in concert with kinetics. Eight healthy participants completed a randomized series of 18 experiments consisting of: (1) a CWR phase of 3 or 8 min followed immediately by; (2) a 5 s maximal isokinetic effort to characterize peak power at 60, 90 and 120 rpm. CWR bouts were: 20 W (Con); 80% LT (Mod); 20%Δ (H); 60%Δ (VH); where Δ is the difference between the work rate at LT and . The was 238 ± 128 and 686 ± 194 ml min−1 during H and VH, with no discernible during Mod. Peak power in Con was 1025 ± 400, 1219 ± 167 and 1298 ± 233 W, at 60, 90 and 120 rpm, respectively, and was not different after Mod (P > 0.05). Velocity-specific peak power was significantly reduced (P < 0.05) by 3 min of H (−103 ± 46 W) and VH (−216 ± 60 W), with no further change by 8 min. The was correlated with the reduction in peak power (R2= 0.49; P < 0.05). These results suggest that muscle fatigue is requisite for the . However, the maintenance of velocity-specific peak power between 3 and 8 min suggests that progressive muscle recruitment is not obligatory. Rather, a reduction in mechanical efficiency in fatigued fibres is implicated
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