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2018/2019

The Effects of High-Intensity Interval Exercise and Hypoxia on Cognition in Sedentary Young Adults^

Medicina*, 2019, 55(2):reference no.43

Author(s)Shengyan Sun,
Paul D. Loprinzi,
Hongwei Guan,
Liye Zou,
Zhaowei Kong,
Yang Hu,
Qingde Shi,
Jinlei Nie
Summary

Background and Objectives: Limited research has evaluated the effects of acute exercise on cognition under different conditions of inspired oxygenation. Thus, the purpose of this study was to examine the effects of high-intensity interval exercise (HIE) under normoxia (inspired fraction of oxygen (FIO2): 0.209) and moderate hypoxia (FIO2: 0.154) on cognitive function.

 

Design: A single-blinded cross-over design was used to observe the main effects of exercise and oxygen level, and interaction effects on cognitive task performance.

 

Methods: Twenty inactive adults (10 males and 10 females, 19–27 years old) performed a cognitive task (i.e., the Go/No-Go task) before and immediately after an acute bout of HIE under normoxic and hypoxic conditions. The HIE comprised 10 repetitions of 6 s high-intensity cycling against 7.5% body weight interspersed with 30 s passive recovery. Heart rate, peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) and rating of perceived exertion were monitored.

 

Results: The acute bout of HIE did not affect the reaction time (p = 0.204, _2 = 0.083) but the accuracy rate decreased significantly after HIE under both normoxic and hypoxic conditions (p = 0.001, _2 = 0.467). Moreover, moderate hypoxia had no influence either on reaction time (p = 0.782, _2 = 0.004) or response accuracy (p = 0.972, _2 < 0.001).

 

Conclusions: These results indicate that an acute session of HIE may impair response accuracy immediately post-HIE, without sacrificing reaction time. Meanwhile moderate hypoxia was found to have no adverse effect on cognitive function in inactive young adults, at least in the present study.


* It is also listed in SCI/SCIE

^ 同時列入不同索引的文章

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