Int J Sports Med 2009; 30(6): 448-454
DOI: 10.1055/s-0028-1119404
Training & Testing

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Investigations of the Lactate Minimum Test

M. A. Johnson 1 , G. R. Sharpe 1 , P. I. Brown 1
  • 1School of Science and Technology, Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham, United Kingdom
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Publication History

accepted after revision December 5, 2008

Publication Date:
06 February 2009 (online)

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Abstract

We evaluated: the agreement between lactate minimum and maximal lactate steady state (MLSS) cycling powers (study 1); whether rates of change of blood lactate concentration during the lactate minimum test reflect that of constant power exercise (study 2); whether the lactate minimum power is influenced by the muscle groups used to elevate blood lactate concentration (study 3). Study 1: 32 subjects performed a lactate minimum test comprising a lactate elevation phase, recovery phase, and incremental phase (five 4 min stages); MLSS was subsequently determined. Study 2: 8 subjects performed a lactate minimum test and five 22 min constant power tests at the incremental phase exercise intensities. Study 3: 10 subjects performed two identical lactate minimum tests, except during the second test the lactate elevation phase comprised arm-cranking. Lactate minimum and MLSS powers demonstrated good agreement (mean bias±95% limits of agreement: 2±22 W). Rates of change of blood lactate concentration during each incremental phase stage and corresponding constant power test did not correlate. Lactate minimum power was lowered when arm-cranking was used during the lactate elevation phase (157±29 vs. 168±21 W; p<0.05). The lactate elevation phase modifies blood lactate concentration responses during the incremental phase, thus good agreement between lactate minimum and MLSS powers seems fortuitous.

References

Correspondence

Dr. M. A. Johnson

School of Science and Technology

Nottingham Trent University

Clifton Campus

Nottingham

United Kingdom

NG11 8NS

Phone: +44/115/848 33 62

Fax: +44/115/848 66 36

Email: michael.johnson@ntu.ac.uk