Time-course of changes in indirect markers of muscle damage responses following a 130-km cycling race
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1590/1980-0037.2016v18n3p322Resumen
The purpose of the present investigation was to identify the effects of a 130-km cycling race on indices of biochemical indirect markers of muscle damage and muscle soreness responses during a 72-hour recovery period. Fifteen endurance-trained male cyclists which were competing for more than 2 years and were involved in systematic training at least of 3 days/wk underwent a collection of indirect biochemical markers of muscle damage (CK, LDH, Myo) and delayed onset of muscle soreness (DOMS), at five different moments of data collection: before (PRE) and immediately after (POST) a 130-km cycling race, and 24, 48, 72 hours following the cycling race. CK and LDH plasma concentrations significantly increased POST-race (p < 0.001) and remained high throughout the 72 hour recover period (CK: p < 0.05; LDH: p < 0.001). Myo increased significantly POST-race (p < 0.001) and returned to the PRE-race values 24 hours thereafter (p < 0.05). DOMS increased significantly POST-race (p < 0.001) and returned to the PRE-race values at 48 hours after (p > 0.05). A 130-km cycling race has a noteworty effect on indices of biochemical indirect markers of muscle damage and muscle soreness responses, indicating that 72 hour recovery period do not seems to be enough for long-distance cyclist, and reinforce the propositions of scientific literature about the need of a sufficient recovery period for cycling endurance athletes.
Descargas
Publicado
Número
Sección
Licencia
Os direitos Autorais para artigos publicados nesta revista são do autor. Os autores concedem os direitos de primeira publicação à RBCDH, sendo a obra simultaneamente licenciada sob a Licença Creative Commons (CC BY) 4.0 Internacional.
Os autores estão autorizados a celebrar contratos adicionais separadamente, para distribuição não exclusiva da versão do trabalho publicada nesta revista (por exemplo, publicação em repositório institucional, em site pessoal, publicação de tradução ou como capítulo de livro), com reconhecimento de autoria e publicação inicial nesta revista.
