The present study examined whether differences in the heart rate recovery following flywheel exercise cessation were associated with differences in maximal oxygen uptake (V ˙ O2 max.), age and sex in trained adults. Eleven men (age range 22–49 years, V ˙ O2 max. = 43.6 ± 7.6 mL kg min−1) and ten women (age range 20—53 years, V ˙ O2 max. = 38.0 ± 5.7 mL kg min−1) were randomly assigned to complete a squat-exercise on the flywheel ergometer set at three different moments of inertia, while their cardiovascular responses were continuously monitored. During the flywheel exercise the mean arterial pressure rose by ~ 35 to 40% (p =.001), and the increment was more robust in men than women. The cardiac index was two-fold greater across both sexes compared to the baseline (p =.001), while the rise in heart rate (~ 144 bpm) was more pronounced in women to compensate for their load-dependent stroke index decline (p =.001). The load-independent time-course changes in heart rate recovery markers were comparable between the sexes. When these indicators were pooled, a stepwise regression revealed age as the only relevant predictor of both fast and slow components of the heart rate recovery (~ 30% of the shared variance explained, p =.014). The present data suggest that the heart rate recovery declines with age, irrespective of sex, or well-preserved cardiorespiratory fitness in moderately-trained adults.
CITATION STYLE
Zubac, D., Goswami, N., Ivančev, V., Valić, Z., & Šimunič, B. (2021). Independent influence of age on heart rate recovery after flywheel exercise in trained men and women. Scientific Reports, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-91565-w
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