Volume 16(6): April, 2011

FATIGUE IN EXERCISE 3

This sixth issue of Volume 16 of the Coaching Science Abstracts reviews articles concerned with types of exercise fatigue and their effects on bodily function. Two previous issues on this topic, Fatigue in Exercise and Fatigue in Exercise 2, can be accessed by clicking these links.

red line

    TABLE OF CONTENTS

    GENERAL

  1. GENDERS ARE SIMILAR ON MUSCLE FATIGABILITY

    Gore, S. A., Keller, B. A., & Ives, J. C. (2003). Gender differences in central and peripheral factors of skeletal muscle fatigue. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 35(5), Supplement abstract 801.

  2. GENDER FATIGUE DIFFERENCES DEPEND UPON THE TESTING PROTOCOL

    Russ, D. W., Bartholomew, D. M., Towse, T. F., & Kent-Braun, J. A. (2003). Influence of duty cycle on sex differences in fatigue during maximum-effort exercise. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 35(5), Supplement abstract 802.

  3. BLOOD RED CELLS SLOW WHILE TRANSITING MUSCLE IN FATIGUE

    Angus, C., Elwell, C. E., & Cooper, C. E. Can measurements of erythrocyte transit time inform on the mechanisms of increasing muscle oxygen extraction? Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 35(5), Supplement abstract 522.

  4. WOMEN FATIGUE MORE EASILY IN OVULATION

    Drake, S. M., Evetovich, T. K., Eschbach, C., Webster, M., & Whitehead, T. (2004). The effect of menstrual cycle on electromyography and mechanomyography during fatigue. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 36(5), Supplement abstract 813.

  5. MEN AND WOMEN FATIGUE SIMILARLY DURING FATIGUING ARM CONTRACTIONS

    Rudroff, T., Poston, B., Bojsen-Molr, J., & Enoka, R. M. (2004). Strength-matched men and women perform similarly on fatiguing contractions with arm muscles. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 36(5), Supplement abstract 1889.

  6. FEMALES’ METABOLISM ACCOUNTS FOR BETTER FATIGUE RESISTANCE

    Clark, B., Collier, S. R., Manini, T. M., & Ploutz-Snyder, L. L. (2004). Sex differences in muscle fatigability and neuromuscular activation patterns of the human quadriceps femoris. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 36(5), Supplement abstract 1892.

  7. FATIGUING SUBMAXIMAL EXERCISE OF ONE LIMB PRODUCES CENTRAL FATIGUE THAT TRANSFERS TO SOME DEGREE TO THE NON-EXERCISED LIMB

    Litvintsev, A., & Cafarelli, E. (2005). How central is central fatigue? Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 37(5), Supplement abstract 568.

  8. MALES FATIGUE FASTER THAN FEMALES IN ISOMETRIC CONTRACTIONS

    Hunter, S. K., Sanders, J. M., Polichnowski, A J., & Ng, A. V. (2005). Men have greater hyperemia than women for a similar intensity isometric fatiguing contraction. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 37(5), Supplement abstract 2006.

  9. MALES FATIGUE SOONER THAN FEMALES IN LOW-INTENSITY ISOMETRIC CONTRACTIONS

    Griffith, E. E., Yoon, T., Schlinder-Delap, B., & Hunter, S. K. (2006). Sex differences in muscle fatigability are task dependent and not explained by a difference in central fatigue. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 38(5), Supplement abstract 1351.

  10. EXERCISE-INDUCED MUSCLE INJURY ELEVATES AEROBIC AND ANAEROBIC METABOLISM

    Corona, B. T., Green, M. S., Doyle, J. A., Rupp, J. C., & Ingalls, C. P. (2006). Exercise-induced muscle injury results in elevations in aerobic and anaerobic metabolism during submaximal treadmill running. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 38(5), Supplement abstract 1523.

  11. BOTH GENDERS ARE SIMILARLY RESISTANT TO SPRINT CYCLING FATIGUE

    Krah, S. A., Gonzales, J. U., Thompson, B. C., Thistelthwaite, J. R., & Scheuermann, B. W. (2006). Fatigue in females and males in response to repeated bouts of 30 s sprint cycling exercise. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 38(5), Supplement abstract 1729.

  12. MUSCLE DAMAGE AFFECTS SUBSEQUENT PERFORMANCE MORE THAN DOMS

    Endoh, T., Nakajima, T., Sakamoto, M., Tazoe, T., Ogawa, H, Yoneda, T., & Komiyama, T. (2006). Exercise-induced muscle damage exacerbates muscle fatigue. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 38(5), Supplement abstract 2006.

  13. MUSCLE FATIGUE CHANGES THE WAY MUSCLE GROUPS FUNCTION

    Ballantyne, B. T., & Shields, R. K. (2006). Muscle fatigue alters neuromuscular performance during resisted weight bearing exercise. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 38(5), Supplement abstract 2404.

  14. PHYSICAL FATIGUE REDUCES MENTAL FUNCTION

    Van Duinen, H., Browne, K., Renken, R. J., & Zijdewind, I. (2007). Brain activity during motor fatigue and cognitive task performance. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 38(5), Supplement abstract 699.

  15. FATIGUE AND RESUMPTION OF EXERCISE AFTER A REST INCREASE THE LIKELIHOOD OF JOINT INJURIES

    Greig, M., & McNaughton, L. (2006). Progressive decrease in dynamic postural control during simulated soccer match-play. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 38(5), Supplement abstract 1087.

  16. AGE- BUT NOT SEX-BASED DIFFERENCES IN INTERMITTENT ISOMETRIC FATIGUE

    Russ, D. W., Towse, T. F., Wigmore, D. M., Lanza, I. R., & Kent-Braun, J. A. (2008). Contrasting influences of age and sex on muscle fatigue. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 40, 234-241.

  17. FATIGUING SPRINT SETS CAUSE SUBSEQUENT SPRINT SETS TO FATIGUE QUICKER

    Mendez-Villanueva, A., Hamer, P., & Bishop, D. (2007). Fatigue responses during repeated sprints matched for initial mechanical output. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 39, 2219-2225.

  18. OLDER PERSONS HANDLE FATIGUE AS WELL AS YOUNGER PERSONS

    Callahan, D. M., Foulis, S. A., & Kent-Braun, J. A. (2008). Age-related fatigue resistance is contraction mode dependant. ACSM 55th Annual Meeting Indianapolis. Presentation number 1986.

  19. PROLONGED-EXERCISE FATIGUE HAS BOTH CENTRAL AND PERIPHERAL COMPONENTS

    Ross, E. A., Gregson, W., Williams, K., & George, K. (2009). Neuromuscular fatigue following repetitive endurance cycling. ACSM 56th Annual Meeting, Seattle, Washington. Presentation number 1987.

  20. PERIPHERAL JOINTS FATIGUE FAST IN ANAEROBIC WORK

    Martin, J. C., & Brown, N. A. (2009). Joint-specific power production and fatigue during maximal cycling. ACSM 56th Annual Meeting, Seattle, Washington Presentation number 2772.

  21. RATE OF FORCE DEVELOPMENT IS AFFECTED BY SEVERAL FACTORS AFTER FATIGUE IN DIFFERENT FORMS OF RESISTANCE EXERCISE

    Philippou, A., Bogdanis, G. C., & Maridaki, M. (2009). Changes in the rate of force development measured at different muscle lengths following eccentric and isometric exercise. A paper presented at the 14th Annual Congress of the European College of Sport Science, Oslo, Norway, June 24-27.

  22. MENTAL FATIGUE IN PERFORMANCE IS NOT SIMPLY ASSOCIATED WITH PERFORMANCE FATIGUE

    Baumeister, J., Reinecki, K., St Clair Gibson, A., Rauch, L., Nokes, T., & Weiss, M. (2009). Mental fatigue as a tool in sports and exercise evaluation of performance, perception, and brain activity. A paper presented at the 14th Annual Congress of the European College of Sport Science, Oslo, Norway, June 24-27.

  23. PERFORMANCE EFFICIENCY DECREASES ACROSS EVENT TIME – JUSTIFICATION FOR TECHNIQUE CONCENTRATION

    Uitslag, T. P., Galiart, R., Foster, C., Porcari, J. P., Daanen, H., Noordhof, D. A., & de Konig, J. J. (2010). Changes in gross efficiency during high intensity exercise. Presentation 2237 at the 2010 Annual Meeting of the American College of Sports Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, June 2-5.

    FACTORS INVOLVED IN EXERCISE FATIGUE

  24. ELEVATED ARMS ACCELERATE FATIGUE

    Ichimura, S., Hamaoka, T., Murase, N., Osada, T., Homma, T, Ueda, C., Nagasawa, T., Nakagawa, N., & Katsumura, T. (2003). The relationship between oxygen supply and neuromuscular fatigue. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 35(5), Supplement abstract 217.

  25. BRAIN REGULATION IS ASSOCIATED WITH 5 km FATIGUE

    Sharwood, K., Paavolainen, L., Nummela, A., Lambert, M., St Clair Gibson, A., Rusko, H., & Noakes, T. (2003). Changes in neural recruitment patterns during and after a 5 km time trial in distance runners. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 35(5), Supplement abstract 567.

  26. FATIGUE NOT AFFECTED BY ANTIOXIDANT SUPPLEMENTATION

    Guillory, I., Nelson, A. G., & Glickman, E. (2003). The effect of an acute dosage of an antioxidant mixture upon fatigue during intermittent work. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 35(5), Supplement abstract 807.

  27. SEVERAL FACTORS DETERMINE IF THERE IS A GENDER DIFFERENCE IN FATIGABILITY

    Clark, B. C., Manimi, T. M., The, D. J., Doldo, N. A., & Ploutz-Snyder, L. L. (2003). Role of contraction type and activation strategies in fatigability differences between males and females. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 35(5), Supplement abstract 809.

  28. LACTATE AND OXYGEN UTILIZATION DO NOT CAUSE EXERCISE CESSATION IN HIGH-INTENSITY STEADY STATE WORK

    Wyatt, F. B., Autrey, L., Colson, S., Fitzgerald, Y., Sterba, T., & Heimdal, J. (2004). Fatigue occurs below VO2max and peak blood lactate at high intensity steady state. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 36(5), Supplement abstract 826.

  29. ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS AFFECT ENDURANCE PERFORMANCE

    Nethery, V. (2006). Sensory mediated dissociation affects RPE and ride time to fatigue in trained cyclists. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 38(5), Supplement abstract 2002.

  30. THINKING HARDER AND MORE INTENTLY CAN SLOW PERFORMANCE DECLINE DUE TO FATIGUE

    Post, M., Renken, R., & Zijdewind, I. (2006). Cortical activity during a sustained maximal contraction: An fMRI study. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 38(5), Supplement abstract 2007.

  31. FEELINGS MIRROR CHO SUPPLEMENTATION, THERMAL STRESS, AND PERFORMANCE

    Holt, C., Bailey, S. P., Pfluger, K. C., Bartlett, S., Stripling, R., & Hall, E. E. (2006). Impact of carbohydrate supplementation on perceptual and affective responses to prolonged exercise in the heat. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 38(5), Supplement abstract 2008.

  32. TELEOANTICIPATION NOT INVOLVED WITH REPEATED SPRINT EXERCISES

    Bishop, D. J., Mendez-Villanueva, A., & Calvo-Ruiz, P. (2006). Teleoanticipation does not occur during repeated-sprint exercise. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 38(5), Supplement abstract 2009.

  33. SODIUM BICARBONATE IMPROVES JUDO PERFORMANCE

    Artioli, G. G., Gualano, B., Benatti, F. B., Coelho, D. F., Gailey, A C., & Lancha Jr., A. H. (2006). Sodium bicarbonate ingestion and its effects on blood lactate and judo-related performance. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 38(5), Supplement abstract 1123.

  34. REPEATED EXERCISES TO FATIGUE REDUCES THE ABILITY TO PRODUCE FORCE

    Stewart, R. D., Duhamel, T. A., Rich, S., Tupling, A. R., & Green, H. J. (2008). Effects of consecutive days of exercise and recovery on muscle mechanical function. Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 40, 316-325.

  35. ONLY FORCE PRODUCTION DECLINES WITH FATIGUE

    Kremenic, I. J., Glace, B. W., & McHugh, M. P. (2008). EMG changes during a prolonged bout of cycling. ACSM 55th Annual Meeting Indianapolis. Presentation number 2501.

  36. FATIGUE FROM PLYOMETRIC TRAINING SHOULD BE COUPLED WITH 24 HOURS OF RECOVERY

    Cook, S. B., Faust, K. F., Ploutz-Snyder, L. L., & Kanaley, J. A. (2008). The effects of an acute bout of plyometrics on muscle fatigue in female athletes. ACSM 55th Annual Meeting Indianapolis. Presentation number 539.

  37. CARBOHYDRATE INGESTION STALLS FATIGUE EFFECTS AND IMPROVES MAXIMAL FORCE PRODUCTION

    Gant, N., Stinear, C. M., & Byblow, W. D. (2009). Effects of carbohydrate ingestion on central fatigue. ACSM 56th Annual Meeting, Seattle, Washington. Presentation number 2296.

  38. AEROBIC ENERGY SUPPLY LIMITS HIGH-INTENSITY EXERCISE

    Bishop, D., Bortolotti, S., & Ferri, A. (2009). Task failure during high-intensity exercise is associated with a critical reduction in tissue oxygenation. A paper presented at the 14th Annual Congress of the European College of Sport Science, Oslo, Norway, June 24-27.

  39. MUSCLE GLYCOGEN PLAYS TWO ROLES IN FATIGUE

    Ortenblad, N. (2009). Muscle fatigue in elite cross country skiers: A link between sarcoplasmic reticulum function and glycogen availability? A paper presented at the 14th Annual Congress of the European College of Sport Science, Oslo, Norway, June 24-27.

  40. NORADRENALINE IS INVOLVED WITH FATIGUE

    Roelands, B., & Meeursen, R. (2009). The possible role of serotonine, dopamine, and noradrenaline in central fatigue. A paper presented at the 14th Annual Congress of the European College of Sport Science, Oslo, Norway, June 24-27.

Return to Coaching Science Abstracts' Main Table of Contents.

red line