The Reliability of Running Performance in a 5 km Time Trial on a Non-motorized Treadmill

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Abstract

The purpose of the study was to establish the reliability of performance and physiological responses during a self-paced 5 km running time trial on a non-motorized treadmill. 17 male runners (age: 32±13 years, height: 177±7 cm, body mass: 71±9 kg, sum of 7 skinfolds: 55±21 mm) performed familiarization then 2 separate maximal 5 km running time trials on a non-motorized treadmill. Physiological responses measured included heart rate, oxygen uptake, expired air volume, blood lactate concentration, tissue saturation index and integrated electromyography. Running time (1 522±163 s vs. 1 519±162 s for trials 1 and 2, respectively) demonstrated a low CV of 1.2% and high ICC of 0.99. All physiological variables had CVs of less than 4% and ICCs of >0.92, with the exception of blood lactate concentration (7.0±2 mmol·L-1 vs. 6.5±1.5 mmol·L-1 for trials 1 and 2, respectively; CV: 12%, ICC: 0.83) and the electromyography measures (CV: 8-27%, ICC: 0.71-0.91). The data demonstrate that performance time in a 5 km running time trial on a non-motorized treadmill is a highly reliable test. Most physiological responses measured across the 5 km run also demonstrated good reliability.

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Stevens, C. J., Hacene, J., Sculley, D. V., Taylor, L., Callister, R., & Dascombe, B. (2015). The Reliability of Running Performance in a 5 km Time Trial on a Non-motorized Treadmill. International Journal of Sports Medicine, 36(9), 705–709. https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0034-1398680

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