Do blood volume, haemoglobin mass, and aerobic capacity differ between male and female elite junior rowers?
Gender differences in blood volume, haemoglobin mass, and aerobic capacity in elite junior rowers are primarily driven by differences in fat-free mass rather than gender itself.
Purpose: To compare total blood volume (BV), haemoglobin (Hb) mass, and aerobic capacity in male and female elite junior rowers. Methods: Competitive academic rowers (25 males and 14 females) of the Lithuanian junior rowing national team were recruited for the study. Mean age in males and females was 18.4 ± 2.4 and 17.0 ± 1.9 years, height – 1.92 ± 0.50 and 1.77 ± 0.70 m, body mass – 89.26 ± 4.72 and 74.17 ± 11.25 kg, respectively. They completed gradually increasing workload on rowing ergometer (Concept 2), during which pulmonary gas exchange was measured on a breath-by-breath basis using the portable analyser MetaMax 3B (Cortex, Germany). BV and Hb mass were determined using the CO rebreathing method. Results: Hb concentration (males – 149.5 ± 9.5 vs females – 134.1 ± 6.9 g/L), absolute Hb mass (1,082.6 ± 90.7 vs 720.2 ± 49.3 g) and relative to body mass Hb mass (12.17 ± 1.07 vs 9.86 ± 1.20 g/kg) values were higher in male rowers compared to female rowers (p 0.05). Absolute plasma volume (PV) was higher in male rowers (3,948.7 ± 531.9 vs 3,174.3 ± 359.4 ml; p 0.05). Absolute BV (7,270.0 ± 716.8 vs 5,388.1 ± 470.8 ml) and relative to body weight BV (81.62 ± 8.44 vs 73.51 ± 8.34 ml/kg) was higher in male rowers (p 0.05). Absolute maximum oxygen uptake (V̇O2max) (6.278 ± 0.400 vs 4.478 ± 0.288 L/min) and relative to body mass V̇O2max (70.17 ± 5.58 vs 61.28 ± 7.28 ml/kg/min) during graded exercise test was higher in male rowers compared to female rowers (p 0.05). Conclusion: Absolute and relative to body mass total BV, Hb mass, and aerobic capacity variables are higher in elite junior male rowers compared to females, but similar when adjusted for fat-free mass. In contrast, plasma volume relative to fat-free mass is higher in elite junior female rowers compared to males
Maconyte et al. (Wed,) studied this question.