Estimating the Energy Costs of Intermittent Exercise
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-30-2013
Publication Title
Journal of Human Kinetics
Keywords
intense exercise, resistance training, total energy expenditure, work volume
Abstract
To date, steady state models represent the only acceptable methodology for the estimation of exercise energy costs. Conversely, comparisons made between continuous and intermittent exercise generally reveal major physiological discrepancies, leading to speculation as to why steady state energy expenditure models should be applied to intermittent exercise. Under intermittent conditions, skeletal muscle invokes varying aerobic and anaerobic metabolic responses, each with the potential to make significant contributions to overall energy costs. We hypothesize that if the aerobic-only energetic profile of steady state exercise can be used to estimate the energetics of non-steady state and intermittent exercise, then the converse also must be true. In fact, reasonable estimates of energy costs to work volumes or work rates can be demonstrated under steady state, non-steady state and intermittent conditions; the problem with the latter two is metabolic variability. Using resistance training as a model, estimates of both aerobic and anaerobic energy cost components, as opposed to one or the other, have reduced the overall energetic variability that appears inherent to brief, intense, intermittent exercise models.
Recommended Citation
Scott, C.B., & Fountaine, C. (2013). Estimating the Energy Costs of Intermittent Exercise. Journal of Human Kinetics, 38, 107–113. http://doi.org/10.2478/hukin-2013-0050
Comments
Copyright © Editorial Committee of Journal of Human Kinetics
This article is an open-access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).