Rethinking the role of fat oxidation: substrate utilisation during high-intensity interval training in well-trained and recreationally trained runners
Read full paper →- Authors
- Ken J. Hetlelid, Daniel J. Plews, Eva Herold, Paul B. Laursen, Stephen Seiler
- Journal
- BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine
- Year
- 2015
- Citations
- 69
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although carbohydrate is the predominant fuel source supporting high-intensity exercise workloads, the role of fat oxidation, and the degree to which it may be altered by training status, is less certain. METHODS: 55±5 mL/min/kg) male runners performed a self-paced HIT sequence consisting of six, 4 min work bouts separated by 2 min recovery periods on a motorised treadmill set at a 5% gradient. RESULTS: (r=0.86; 90% CI (0.7 to 0.94). CONCLUSIONS: Despite similar RPE, blood lactate and carbohydrate oxidation rates, the better performance by the WT group was explained by their nearly threefold higher rates of fat oxidation at high intensity.