Int J Sports Med 1982; 03(2): 100-104
DOI: 10.1055/s-2008-1026071
© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Ventilatory Endurance in Athletes: a Family Study*

B. J. Martin, H.-I. Chen
  • Physiology Section, Medical Sciences Program, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405
* This study was supported in part by grant HL 26351-01 from the NIH.
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
14 March 2008 (online)

Abstract

Endurance athletes possess superior ability to sustain high ventilation. However, it remains unknown if this high ventilatory endurance is an effect of training. As one approach to this question, we compared the breathing endurance of eight distance runners with that of eight of their siblings who were untrained. In two separate tests involving seated isocapnic hyperpnea, the athletes had greater ability to sustain high V̇E than did their brothers and sisters. In the first test, V̇E was voluntarily incremented by 30 l/min each 4 min. Before exhaustion, the athletes reached a V̇E that was a significantly greater fraction of their 12-s maximal voluntary ventilation than did the untrained siblings (75 vs. 62%; P < 0.01). In the second test, 80% of the 12-s MVV was sustained until exhaustion. Endurance times for the athletes doubled those of the untrained siblings (7 vs. 3 min; P < 0.05). The failure of elevated ventilatory endurance to occur in family clusters suggests that it may primarily result from training.

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