Neuromuscular adaptations in endurance-trained male adolescents versus untrained peers: A 9-month longitudinal study
Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Title
Scandinavian Journal of Medicine and Science in Sports
Volume
34
Issue
6
PubMed ID
38881390
Publisher
Wiley
School
Centre for Human Performance / School of Medical and Health Sciences
RAS ID
71497
Abstract
Background: Neuromuscular function is considered as a determinant factor of endurance performance during adulthood. However, whether endurance training triggers further neuromuscular adaptations exceeding those of growth and maturation alone over the rapid adolescent growth period is yet to be determined. Objective: The present study investigated the concurrent role of growth, maturation, and endurance training on neuromuscular function through a 9-month training period in adolescent triathletes. Methods: Thirty-eight 13- to 15-year-old males (23 triathletes [~6 h/week endurance training] and 15 untrained [<2 h/week endurance activity]) were evaluated before and after a 9-month triathlon training season. Maximal oxygen uptake (V̇O2max) and power at V̇O2max were assessed during incremental cycling. Knee extensor maximal voluntary isometric contraction torque (MVCISO) was measured and the voluntary activation level (VAL) was determined using the twitch interpolation technique. Knee extensor doublet peak torque (T100Hz) and normalized vastus lateralis (VL) electromyographic activity (EMG/M-wave) were also determined. VL and rectus femoris (RF) muscle architecture was assessed using ultrasonography. Results: Absolute V̇O2max increased similarly in both groups but power at V̇O2max only significantly increased in triathletes (+13.8%). MVCISO (+14.4%), VL (+4.4%), and RF (+15.8%) muscle thicknesses and RF pennation angle (+22.1%) increased over the 9-month period in both groups similarly (p < 0.01), although no changes were observed in T100Hz, VAL, or VL EMG/M-wave. No changes were detected in any neuromuscular variables, except for coactivation. Conclusion: Endurance training did not induce detectible, additional neuromuscular adaptations. However, the training-specific cycling power improvement in triathletes may reflect continued skill enhancement over the training period.
DOI
10.1111/sms.14681
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Comments
Birat, A., Garnier, Y. M., Dupuy, A., Bontemps, B., Dodu, A., Grossoeuvre, C., ... & Ratel, S. (2024). Neuromuscular adaptations in endurance‐trained male adolescents versus untrained peers: A 9‐month longitudinal study. Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports, 34(6), e14681. https://doi.org/10.1111/sms.14681