Older master athletes maintained maximal stroke volume similar to young athletes, avoiding age-related declines seen in older sedentary individuals whose VO2max was 47% lower than master athletes.
Cross-Sectional
Master athletes (mean age 56), competitive young runners (mean age 26), matched young runners (mean age 25), and healthy older sedentary subjects (mean age 58) assessed for hemodynamic responses.
Endurance athletic training (Master athlete status) vs Young runners and older sedentary subjects
Maximal O2 consumption (VO2max) and hemodynamic responses to exercise
This study assessed the hemodynamic responses to exercise of master athletes (56 +/- 5 yr of age) who placed in the top 10% of their age groups in local 10-km competitive events, competitive young runners (26 +/- 3 yr), young runners matched in training and performance to the master athletes (25 +/- 3 yr), and healthy older sedentary subjects (58 +/- 5 yr). The maximal O2 consumption (VO2max) of the master athletes was 9 and 19% lower than that of the matched young and competitive young runners, respectively. When compared at the same relative submaximal work rates, these three groups had similar stroke volumes and arteriovenous O2 (aVO2) differences, though the master athletes had lower VO2, cardiac output, and heart rate, and higher vascular resistance. The older sedentary group had a lower stroke volume, aVO2 difference, and higher vascular resistance than the master athletes. Maximal stroke volume and estimated aVO2 difference were the same in the three groups of athletes; the lower maximal heart rate of the master athletes appears to account for their lower VO2max. The older sedentary subjects' VO2max was 47% lower than that of the master athletes; this difference was almost equally the result of a lower stroke volume and a lower a-VO2 difference. Thus these older athletes did not exhibit the decline in maximum stroke volume and aVO2 difference that occurs with aging in sedentary individuals; they also appear to have retained a greater peripheral vasodilatory response than their sedentary peers.
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James M. Hagberg
University of Maryland, College Park
William K. Allen
Douglas R. Seals
Preventive Cardiology
Journal of Applied Physiology
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Hagberg et al. (Sat,) conducted a cross-sectional in Healthy athletes and sedentary individuals. Endurance athletic training (Master athlete status) vs. Young runners and older sedentary subjects was evaluated on Maximal O2 consumption (VO2max) and hemodynamic responses to exercise. Older master athletes maintained maximal stroke volume similar to young athletes, avoiding age-related declines seen in older sedentary individuals whose VO2max was 47% lower than master athletes.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1ec3b65dae381e029a90a1 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1152/jappl.1985.58.6.2041
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