Aerobic high-intensity exercise training increased maximal oxygen uptake by 18% compared to baseline in late post-menopausal women, without altering popliteal artery flow-mediated dilation.
11 healthy, sedentary late post-menopausal women (mean age 64 years) completed an 8-week supervised high-intensity aerobic training program to assess cardiovascular adaptations.
Aerobic high-intensity exercise training vs Pre-training baseline (3 sessions per week, ~60 min per session, >80% max HR for 70% of time)
Maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max) — 18% increase, p=<0.001
Effect estimate: 18% increase
Absolute Event Rate: 1846% vs 1579%
p-value: p=<0.001
The aim of this study was to determine the effect of a period of aerobic high intensity training on central- and peripheral cardiovascular parameters in older post-menopausal women. Eleven healthy post-menopausal (10 years after menopause) women (mean age: 64 years; BMI: 25.3 kg m −2 ) completed an 8-week period of supervised, high intensity cycle training, with sessions conducted three times per week. Before and after the training period maximal oxygen uptake, body composition, popliteal artery flow mediated dilation, exercise hyperemia, arterial blood pressure, and plasma lipids were assessed. In addition, levels of estrogen related receptor α (ERRα) and vasodilator enzymes were determined in muscle biopsy samples. Training induced an 18% increase ( P 0.001) in maximal oxygen uptake. Plasma High-density lipoprotein (HDL) was higher ( P 0.05) after than before the training period. Fat mass was reduced (4.9%; P 0.01), whereas lean body mass was unaltered. Mean arterial blood pressure was unchanged (91 vs. 88 mmHg; P = 0.058) with training. Training did not induce a change in popliteal flow mediated dilation. Exercise hyperemia at submaximal exercise was lower ( P 0.01; 11 and 4.6% at 10 and 16 W, respectively) after compared to before training. Muscle ERRα (~1.7-fold; P 0.01) and eNOS (~1.4-fold; P 0.05) were higher after the training intervention. The current study demonstrates that, in older post-menopausal women, a period of aerobic high intensity training effectively increases maximal oxygen uptake and improves the cardiovascular health profile, without a parallel improvement in conduit artery function.
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Birgitte Høier
University of Copenhagen
Line Boel Nørregaard
University of Copenhagen
Maria Leinum
University of Copenhagen
Frontiers in Aging
University of Copenhagen
Herlev Hospital
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Høier et al. (Fri,) conducted a other in Healthy late post-menopausal women (n=11). Aerobic high-intensity exercise training vs. Pre-training baseline was evaluated on Maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max) (18% increase, p=<0.001). Aerobic high-intensity exercise training increased maximal oxygen uptake by 18% compared to baseline in late post-menopausal women, without altering popliteal artery flow-mediated dilation.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a239ec296b50e6ae79ef0a6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fragi.2021.667519