Title Heart-rate variability and blood-lactate threshold interaction during progressive resistance exercise in healthy older men.
Author Simoes, Rodrigo P; Mendes, Renata G; Castello, Viviane; Machado, Heloisa G; Almeida, Larissa B; Baldissera, Vilmar; Catai, Aparecida M; Arena, Ross; Borghi-Silva, Audrey
Journal J Strength Cond Res Publication Year/Month 2010-May
PMID 20393353 PMCID -N/A-
Affiliation 1.Cardiopulmonary Physiotherapy Laboratory, Nucleus of Research in Physical Exercise, Physiotherapy Department, Federal University of Sao Carlos, Sao Carlos, Brazil.

The objective of this study was to (a) evaluate the impact of the leg press, at variable percentages of 1 repetition maximum (1RM), on heart rate variability (HRV) and blood lactate and (b) determine the relationship between HRV with blood lactate in a healthy elderly cohort. Ten healthy men (64 +/- 4 years) participated in a progressive leg-press protocol to maximal exertion. Initially, 1RM for the leg press was determined for all subjects. The protocol then began at 10% of 1RM, with subsequent increases of 10% until 30% of 1RM, followed by incremental adjustments of 5% until exhaustion. The measurement of instantaneous R-R interval variability from Poincare plots (SD1 and SD2) and time domain indexes (RMSSD and RMSM), blood pressure, and blood lactate were obtained at rest and all leg-press loads. Significant alterations of HRV and blood lactate were observed from 30% of 1RM leg press (p < 0.05). Additionally, significant correlations were found between the lactate threshold (LT) and the RMSSD threshold (r = 0.78; p < 0.01), and between the LT and SD1 threshold (r = 0.81, p < 0.01). We conclude that metabolic and cardiovascular alterations are apparent during relatively low resistance exercise (RE) loads in apparently healthy subjects. In addition, HRV indexes were associated with blood-lactate levels during RE. The practical applications is the possibility of using HRV as a noninvasive measure obtained at a relatively low cost may be used to identify neural and metabolic alterations during RE in older subjects.

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