Abstract
The purpose of this study was to identify the relationship between the bioenergetical
and the biomechanical variables (stroke parameters), through a range of swimming velocities,
in butterfly stroke. Three male and one female butterflier of international level
were submitted to an incremental set of 200-m butterfly swims. The starting velocity
was 1.18 m · s-1 for the males and 1.03 m · s-1 for the female swimmer. Thereafter, the velocity was increased by 0.05 m · s-1 after each swim until exhaustion. Cardio-pulmonary and gas exchange parameters were
measured breath by breath for each swim to analyze oxygen consumption and other energetic
parameters by portable metabolic cart (K4b2, Cosmed, Rome, Italy). A respiratory snorkel and valve system with low hydrodynamic
resistance was used to measure pulmonary ventilation and to collect breathing air
samples. Blood samples from the ear lobe were collected before and after each swim
to analyze blood lactate concentration (YSI 1500 L, Yellow Springs, US). Total energy
expenditure (Ėtot), energetic cost (EC), stroke frequency (SF), stroke length (SL), mean swimming velocity
(V), and stroke index (SI) were calculated for each lap and average for each 200-m
stage. Correlation coefficients between Ėtot and V, EC, and SF, as well as between EC and SI were statistically significant. For
the relation between EC and SL, only one regression equation presented a correlation
coefficient with statistical significance. Relations between SF and V, as well as
between SI and V were significant in all of the swimmers. Only two individual regression
equations presented statistically significant correlation coefficient values for the
relation established between V and the SL. As a conclusion, the present sample of
swims demonstrated large inter individual variations concerning the relationships
between bioenergetic and biomechanical variables in butterfly stroke. Practitioners
should be encouraged to analyze the relationships between V, SF, and SL individually
to detect the deflection point in SL in function of swimming velocity to further determine
appropriate training intensities when trying to improve EC.
Key words
Swimming - energetic - stroke length - stroke rate - stroke index - velocity
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T. Barbosa
Department of Sports Sciences, Polytechnic Institute of Bragança
Campus Sta. Apolónia, Apartado 1101
5301-856 Bragança
Portugal
Phone: + 351273303000
Fax: + 35 12 73 30 31 35
Email: barbosa@ipb.pt