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The contribution of energy systems during 30-second lower body Wingate anaerobic test in combat sports athletes: Intermittent versus single forms and gender comparison
by
Ouergui, Ibrahim
, Ardigò, Luca Paolo
, Tortu, Erkan
, Ulupinar, Süleyman
, Gençoğlu, Cebrail
, Özbay, Serhat
in
Adult
/ Athletes
/ Athletic performance
/ ATP
/ Boxing
/ Boxing - physiology
/ Combat sports
/ Energy
/ Energy expenditure
/ Energy Metabolism
/ Exercise
/ Exercise Test - methods
/ Female
/ Gender
/ Gender aspects
/ Gender differences
/ Glycolysis
/ Humans
/ Lactic Acid - blood
/ Lactic Acid - metabolism
/ Male
/ Martial arts
/ Martial Arts - physiology
/ Metabolic pathways
/ Metabolism
/ Oxygen consumption
/ Oxygen Consumption - physiology
/ Oxygen uptake
/ Physical fitness
/ Physiological aspects
/ Physiological responses
/ Physiology
/ Rest
/ Sex differences
/ Sex Factors
/ Training
/ Women
/ Wrestling - physiology
/ Young Adult
2024
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The contribution of energy systems during 30-second lower body Wingate anaerobic test in combat sports athletes: Intermittent versus single forms and gender comparison
by
Ouergui, Ibrahim
, Ardigò, Luca Paolo
, Tortu, Erkan
, Ulupinar, Süleyman
, Gençoğlu, Cebrail
, Özbay, Serhat
in
Adult
/ Athletes
/ Athletic performance
/ ATP
/ Boxing
/ Boxing - physiology
/ Combat sports
/ Energy
/ Energy expenditure
/ Energy Metabolism
/ Exercise
/ Exercise Test - methods
/ Female
/ Gender
/ Gender aspects
/ Gender differences
/ Glycolysis
/ Humans
/ Lactic Acid - blood
/ Lactic Acid - metabolism
/ Male
/ Martial arts
/ Martial Arts - physiology
/ Metabolic pathways
/ Metabolism
/ Oxygen consumption
/ Oxygen Consumption - physiology
/ Oxygen uptake
/ Physical fitness
/ Physiological aspects
/ Physiological responses
/ Physiology
/ Rest
/ Sex differences
/ Sex Factors
/ Training
/ Women
/ Wrestling - physiology
/ Young Adult
2024
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The contribution of energy systems during 30-second lower body Wingate anaerobic test in combat sports athletes: Intermittent versus single forms and gender comparison
by
Ouergui, Ibrahim
, Ardigò, Luca Paolo
, Tortu, Erkan
, Ulupinar, Süleyman
, Gençoğlu, Cebrail
, Özbay, Serhat
in
Adult
/ Athletes
/ Athletic performance
/ ATP
/ Boxing
/ Boxing - physiology
/ Combat sports
/ Energy
/ Energy expenditure
/ Energy Metabolism
/ Exercise
/ Exercise Test - methods
/ Female
/ Gender
/ Gender aspects
/ Gender differences
/ Glycolysis
/ Humans
/ Lactic Acid - blood
/ Lactic Acid - metabolism
/ Male
/ Martial arts
/ Martial Arts - physiology
/ Metabolic pathways
/ Metabolism
/ Oxygen consumption
/ Oxygen Consumption - physiology
/ Oxygen uptake
/ Physical fitness
/ Physiological aspects
/ Physiological responses
/ Physiology
/ Rest
/ Sex differences
/ Sex Factors
/ Training
/ Women
/ Wrestling - physiology
/ Young Adult
2024
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The contribution of energy systems during 30-second lower body Wingate anaerobic test in combat sports athletes: Intermittent versus single forms and gender comparison
Journal Article
The contribution of energy systems during 30-second lower body Wingate anaerobic test in combat sports athletes: Intermittent versus single forms and gender comparison
2024
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Overview
Combat sports, encompassing a range of activities from striking and grappling to mixed and weapon-based disciplines, have witnessed a surge in popularity worldwide. These sports are demanding, requiring athletes to harness energy from different metabolic pathways to perform short, high-intensity activities interspersed with periods of lower intensity. While it is established that the anaerobic alactic (ATP-PC) and anaerobic lactic systems are pivotal for high-intensity training sessions typical in combat sports, the precise contribution of these systems, particularly in varied training modalities such as single (SMT) and intermittent (IST) forms of the 30-second Wingate test, remains inadequately explored. This study aims at comparing performance outputs, physiological responses and gender differences during the SMT and IST forms of the 30-second Wingate test. Thirty-three highly trained combat sports athletes (17 women, 16 men; 10 boxing, 8 wrestling, 8 taekwondo and 7 karate) randomly performed SMT and IST. The IST consisted of three 10-second all-out attempts separated by 30 seconds of passive recovery, whereas the SMT was a single 30-second maximal effort. Resting, exercise and post-exercise oxygen uptake and peak blood lactate value were used to determine the metabolic energy demands via the PCr-LA-O 2 method. The findings showed that total metabolic energy expenditure (TEE), ATP-PCr system contribution and the output of mechanical variables were higher in the IST than in the SMT form (all p<0.001). In contrast, the contribution of glycolytic and oxidative systems was higher in the SMT form (all p<0.001). However, exercise form and gender interaction were not significant (p>0.05). In combat sports, performance is not only determined by physiological and technical skills but also by metabolic energy input and efficiency. Therefore, our results can provide a comparison regarding the effects of exercise type and gender on metabolic energy metabolism to design the training of combat sports athletes.
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