The aim of the present study was to compare lactate removal during active recovery performed during cycling in water immersion (CW) and during cycling on land (CL) after a similar exercise bout in male adults. We hypothesized that CW could be more effective when compared with CL. In the present study, differences between the blood lactate removal under the two conditions of exercise were found to be significant in the 6th min and 15th min, but not in the 9th min post-exercise. The small size of the sample that was used may contribute to the lack of significance observed at the 9th min of recovery. Therefore, the results indicate that a low intensity recovery at 65% HRmax was more effective when performed in immersion. The faster lactate removal during immersion exercise condition may be partly explained by an increased venous return. At the 3rd min of recovery the blood lactate mean values were close in CW and CL, which may help to support that the blood lactate accumulation during the previous exercise bouts was similar under the two conditions of exercise and that three min of recovery were not sufficient to improve the lactate removal during CW. The exercise intensity in the present study was comprised within the range studied by Connelly et al., 1990 when they found no significant differences in blood lactate accumulation between water immersed and land cycling exercise. However, those authors examined blood lactate accumulation during the cycle exercise and not the lactate removal post-exercise. The mechanisms underlying blood lactate accumulation during exercise are not necessarily the same as those determining lactate removals after exercise. During exercise, several factors affect the lactate concentration found in muscle (and reflected in blood), some of them influencing the lactate production and others the lactate clearance. When exercise stops, even when a low intensity recovery exercise is used, only the factors that influence the lactate removal are pertinent. Therefore, the results from Connelly et al., 1990 are not comparable to the results that were found in the present study. The lower lactate accumulation reported for DWR by Nakanishi et al., 1999 were explained by differences in muscle contraction regimens and by the influence of hydrostatic pressure of the water. However, the Nakanishi study and Town and Bradley’s (1991) lower blood lactate values in immersed compared with land running could be explained by a lesser muscle fiber constriction with immersion and by the weight bearing nature of treadmill running. These studies suggest a lower metabolic demand during running in water immersion. Nakamura et al., 1996 and Villar and Denadai, 1998 support the present study with lower recovery lactates during immersed passive and active recovery, respectively. Contrarily, Frangolias and Rhodes, 1995 found no differences between the lactate removal after treadmill running and running in immersion. This conflict of results may be explained by differences in the methods that were used on the above mentioned studies and in the present study. Indeed, several issues may have influenced the results, such as: i) intensity of the recovery that was used (Boileau et al., 1983); ii) main muscle groups that were elicited (Bulbulian et al., 1987; Nakanishi et al., 1999); iii) temperature of the water (Moore et al., 1970; Nakanishi et al., 1999); iv) gradient of immersion (Moore et al., 1970); v) timing for capillary blood collections (Brooks, 1986); and vi) ingestion of nutrients prior to the experiment (Robergs et al., 2004). The majority of the above-mentioned studies assessed running in immersion instead of cycling exercise. The amount of muscle mass involved in running is larger compared to the one that is used during cycling exercise. The larger muscle mass involved in running may induce a higher lactate accumulation during exercise. On the other hand, the larger active muscle mass may allow an increased lactate oxidation by muscle tissue during an active recovery. Additionally, it is also possible that during land running exercise, a fraction of the muscle mass that is active (i.e. upper limbs) may contribute to lactate oxidation rather than to lactate production, due to the non-propulsive nature of these muscles. Contrarily, during DWR it is possible that the upper limbs may assist in buoying up the subject by circular movements (Nakanishi et al., 1999). Moreover, during DWR the legs also tend to move differently from land running, because of the lack of firm footage and with a slower stride rate. Therefore, it is complex to explain the results of studies that addressed the land running vs DWR issue, let alone to compare those results with those obtained with cycling exercise. During cycling the phenomena determining lactate production and removal may be different. Indeed, both during land or immersion cycling, a much smaller muscle mass is active, other than the muscle used to produce work (compared to running exercise). Therefore, the blood lactate kinetics during and post running exercise may not be comparable with cycling exercise. Even when cycle exercise is compared between water immersion and land conditions, Chen et al., 1996 recommend the use of a single ergometer adapted for land and liquid environment. The authors indicate that this procedure aims to avoid the interference of different body posture in the physiological responses. A possible limitation of the present study is the use of heart rate as criteria to establish similar exercise intensity in land and immersion cycling exercise. Indeed, it is difficult to impose the same exercise intensity in water immersion and in land, because at the same cycle ergometer output the oxygen uptake is higher in water immersion, due to drag effect of displacing water during limb movements (Brechat et al., 1999). We chose to use heart rate to monitor exercise intensity during the recovery because it may be an interesting option for coaches and it can be easily measured. It has also been described that the blood shift and water temperature during immersed exercise may have an effect on heart rate and cardiac output so that exercising at the same work load elicits a higher heart rate (Park et al., 1999). If this is true, then exercise intensity in the present study could have been lower during immersion when compared with land exercise. However, even if the exercise intensity during immersion was lower, this fact is not necessarily an explanation for the larger lactate removal that was observed. Nevertheless, the results of the present study must be viewed as preliminary and warrant further research using other criteria to establish the exercise intensity. |