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Innovations in hypoxic training
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Altitude training is persistently of high interest among athletes, coaches and sport scientists trying to optimize performance at sea level or at altitude.
The effects of hypoxic conditions have been investigated for more than 150 years after the initial experiments on simulated altitude by Paul Bert. From a sporting perspective, the requirement to perform at altitude in the challenging context of the 1968 Mexico Olympics triggered numerous research initiatives back then.
A first symposium on sport at moderate altitude was held in 1965 in Magglingen before a Swiss delegation headed by Dr. Kaspar Wolf sojourned in Mexico in November 1966 to explore the strong discrepancies in the athletes’ individual responses to altitude during their prolonged stay at 2300 m.
60 years later in Magglingen, the knowledge around physiological mechanisms underpinning responses to exercise and training in various low (or high) oxygen environments has increased tremendously with a wide range of recommendations available for altitude training camps or the use of hyperoxia to stimulate specific adaptations. However, numerous questions remain open or under debate to date.
This symposium proposes to explore a few recent scientific findings to further our understanding on hypoxic/hypertoxic training for sporting performance.
Title: Innovations in hypoxic training
Description:
Altitude training is persistently of high interest among athletes, coaches and sport scientists trying to optimize performance at sea level or at altitude.
The effects of hypoxic conditions have been investigated for more than 150 years after the initial experiments on simulated altitude by Paul Bert.
From a sporting perspective, the requirement to perform at altitude in the challenging context of the 1968 Mexico Olympics triggered numerous research initiatives back then.
A first symposium on sport at moderate altitude was held in 1965 in Magglingen before a Swiss delegation headed by Dr.
Kaspar Wolf sojourned in Mexico in November 1966 to explore the strong discrepancies in the athletes’ individual responses to altitude during their prolonged stay at 2300 m.
60 years later in Magglingen, the knowledge around physiological mechanisms underpinning responses to exercise and training in various low (or high) oxygen environments has increased tremendously with a wide range of recommendations available for altitude training camps or the use of hyperoxia to stimulate specific adaptations.
However, numerous questions remain open or under debate to date.
This symposium proposes to explore a few recent scientific findings to further our understanding on hypoxic/hypertoxic training for sporting performance.
Related Results
Abstract 338: Neuronal Responses to Hypoxic Stress in Mouse Cognitive Cortex
Abstract 338: Neuronal Responses to Hypoxic Stress in Mouse Cognitive Cortex
Cardiovascular disorders may cause hypoxic/ischemic injury to the cortex, leading to dysfunction of cortical cognition with a worse outcome in the older population. Although damage...
Institutional innovations for improved water security in smallholder irrigation schemes in KwaZulu-Natal and Eastern Cape Provinces, South Africa
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Smallholder irrigation schemes are regarded as a key strategy to eliminate poverty and increase food security in rural areas in South Africa. While the South African government has...
On the use of mobile inflatable hypoxic marquees for sport-specific altitude training in team sports
On the use of mobile inflatable hypoxic marquees for sport-specific altitude training in team sports
Background/aim
With the evolving boundaries of sports science and greater understanding of the driving factors in the human performance physiology, one of the lim...
Abstract 1260: Tumor hypoxia conditions glioblastoma cells for immunosuppression
Abstract 1260: Tumor hypoxia conditions glioblastoma cells for immunosuppression
Abstract
Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common and lethal malignant brain tumor that invariably recurs after standard therapy, with a median survival of only ~16 mon...
Supplementary Figure 5 from Hypoxia-Induced Creatine Uptake Reprograms Metabolism to Antagonize PARP1-Mediated Cell Death and Facilitate Tumor Progression in Hepatocellular Carcinoma
Supplementary Figure 5 from Hypoxia-Induced Creatine Uptake Reprograms Metabolism to Antagonize PARP1-Mediated Cell Death and Facilitate Tumor Progression in Hepatocellular Carcinoma
<p>Supplementary Figure 5. The oncogenic role of creatine depends on SERPINE1 to form a creatine/SERPINE1/HIF-1α positive feedback loop. (A-C) CCK-8 (A), EdU incorporation (B...
Proteomic Profile Analysis of Pulmonary Artery in a Rat Model Under
Hypoxic Pulmonary Hypertension
Proteomic Profile Analysis of Pulmonary Artery in a Rat Model Under
Hypoxic Pulmonary Hypertension
Aim:
Proteomic profile analysis of pulmonary artery in a rat model under hypoxic pulmonary hypertension
Background:
Background: Hypoxic pulmonary hypertension (HPH) is a patholo...
The acute hypoxic ventilatory response under halothane, isoflurane, and sevoflurane anaesthesia in rats*
The acute hypoxic ventilatory response under halothane, isoflurane, and sevoflurane anaesthesia in rats*
SummaryThe relative order of potency of anaesthetic agents on the hypoxic ventilatory response has been tested in humans, but animal data are sparse. We examined the effects of 1.4...
Nitric Oxide Impacts Endothelin-1 Gene Expression in Intrapulmonary Arteries of Chronically Hypoxic Rats
Nitric Oxide Impacts Endothelin-1 Gene Expression in Intrapulmonary Arteries of Chronically Hypoxic Rats
This study aimed to investigate whether nitric oxide (NO) could inhibit the elevated endothelin-1 (ET-1) gene expression by pulmonary artery endothelial cells or smooth muscle cell...

