Research article - (2008)07, 32 - 38 |
Exertion During Uphill, Level and Downhill Walking With and Without Hiking Poles |
Stephane Perrey1,, Nicolas Fabre2 |
Key words: Energy cost, grades, hiking poles, respiration, nordic-walking |
Key Points |
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Subjects |
Five male and seven female subjects between the ages of 22 and 49 years ( |
Experimental protocol |
Each of the 12 subjects performed the 3 x 2 x 2 (grades x poles x load carriage) different exercise trials (on two different days separated by at least 48 h) in a counterbalanced randomized order at an individually preferred walking speed (PS). Subjects walked on a motor driven treadmill (S2500, HEF Techmachine, Andrézieux Bouthéon, France) at grades of 0, ± 15%, carrying or not a backpack loaded to 15% body mass, and with and without hiking poles. Each exercise trial was fixed to 10 min, where the first 5-min was devoted to warm-up, accommodation, and selection of PS. The last 5-min was dedicated to data collection period when the subject was at the self-selected PS for a given condition. On completing each 10-min trial (6 repetitions in one day), subjects were disconnected from the metabolic system, after which they rested to allow their HR to come within 5 beats·min-1 of resting values. At the end of each trial, subjects were asked to perceive their rate of exertion (RPE) on the 6-20 graded scale proposed by Borg, The PS (in km·h-1) was determined for each condition in all subjects according to the method proposed by Martin et al., The load of 15% of body mass was placed in a commercially made backpack (Salomon, Inc.) equipped with adjustable sternum strap, hip belt, and load lifters. Traditional hiking poles (model Tibet antishock, McKinley, Italy, mass of 325 g each pole) were individually fit for each subject with adjustable, telescopic sections and wrist straps by taking into account the elbow joint angle at plant (i.e., 90° while the pole was held in a vertical position and in contact with the ground). |
Materials |
Gas exchange and ventilatory parameters were collected breath-by-breath during all trials by means of a portable (mass of 450 g) metabolic system (Cosmed K4b2, Rome, Italy). HR was monitored continuously using a wireless HR monitor (Polar, Kempele, Finland), and was synchronized to ventilatory and gas signals. Gas analyzers were calibrated before each test with ambient air (O2: 20.93 % and CO2: 0.03 %) and a gas mixture of known composition (O2: 16.00 % and CO2: 5.00 %). The facemask was equipped with a low-resistance, bidirectional digital turbine (28-mm diameter) that was calibrated before each test with a 3-L syringe (Hans Rudolph Inc, Dallas, USA). Inspiratory and expiratory flow was measured continuously by a nasal thermistance (SS6L temperature transducer BSL, Biopac Systems, Inc., Santa Barbara, USA) attached just under the nostril of the subject. Finally, a mechano-electrical goniometer was fixed on the right knee of all subjects in order to record the stride rate during walking trials. These two analogical sensors were continuously recorded and synchronized at 1000 Hz during the last 5 min of each trial by means of the Biopac MP30 unit (Biopac Systems, Inc., Santa Barbara, USA). |
Analysis |
Ventilatory and gas exchange variables were averaged during the last 2-min of each trial after metabolic steady state achievement and constant walking pace. Minute ventilation (VE, l·min-1), breathing frequency (Bf, cycles·min-1), tidal volume (VT, l), HR (beats·min-1), VO2 (ml·min-1·kg-1) and respiratory exchange ratio (RER) were then determined. In our design, VO2 was representative of the total EC. As a result, the aerobic EC (mlO2·kg-1·m-1) of walking was calculated as the quotient of steady-state VO2 divided by the walking speed. Finally, to evaluate the relationship between stride rate and breathing frequency, we estimated the average ratio of locomotor movement (stride rate) to breathing frequency (inspiratory and expiratory flow) during the last 2 min of each 10-min trial. |
Statistical analysis |
All data are presented as means ± SD. Significant differences for grade, load carriage, and hiking poles were calculated by analysis of variance with repeated measurements [3 (grade) x 2 (hiking poles) x 2 (load carriage)], and were completed with the post-hoc Scheffé test. Comparisons were made on the following dependent variables: respiratory parameters (VE, VT, Bf, VO2), stride frequency, HR, EC, RPE and the mean ratio of stride rate per breath. A linear regression was performed to show relationship between EC and average ratio of locomotor movement to breathing frequency. Significativity level was fixed to p < 0.05. The software used was Statistica 7.1 (Statsoft Inc., Maisons-Alfort, France). |
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All subjects carried out all experimental conditions. Only one recording was not performed with the portable metabolic system due to technical problem. Results are therefore presented either for 11 or 12 subjects accordingly. There was a significant effect of the grade on PS with a rank order as level (4.7 ± 0.6 km·h-1) > downhill (4.5 ± 0.7 km·h-1) > uphill (4.1 ± 0.6 km·h-1). Post-hoc tests indicated that PS was significantly lower during uphill compared to downhill and level (p < 0.05). There were neither hiking poles nor load carriage effects on PS. |
Energy expenditure |
RER values were only influenced significantly by grade. Post-hoc tests showed that RER was significantly lower (p < 0.05) during level (0.88 ± 0.06) compared with downhill (0.92 ± 0.10) and uphill (0.96 ± 0.04) trials. VO2 values were significantly higher with carrying load [F(1, 10) = 23.5, p < 0.001], with poles [F(1, 10) = 6.1, p < 0.05] and during uphill [F(2, 20) = 217.1, p < 0.001]. An interaction effect (poles x grade) was observed [F(2, 20) = 16.6, p < 0.001]. Post hoc tests revealed that there were no significant differences between trials with and without poles during either level or uphill terrain. However, VO2 values were significantly higher with the use of hiking poles during downhill walking (+ 19%, p < 0.05). Results for EC displayed in HR was significantly higher during uphill compared to level (+ 36%, p < 0.05) and downhill terrain (+ 52%, p < 0.05), and with carrying external load (+ 8%, p < 0.05) than without. HR was not influenced by the use of poles. |
Ventilatory variables |
Values of VE were significantly higher with carrying load [F(1, 10) = 24.5, p < 0.001] and during uphill [F(2, 20) = 113.9, p < 0.001]. As displayed in Carrying load of 15 % body mass [F(1, 10 = 14.7, p < 0.01], the no use of hiking poles [F(1, 10) = 6.3, p < 0.05], and downhill terrain [F(2, 20) = 264.1, p < 0.001] increased VT values. Moreover, VT with carrying load was significantly higher with poles by 7% than without; this difference disappeared without load carriage. Importantly, VT was significantly lower by 9 % with poles than without during uphill ( Values of Bf were significantly higher during trials with poles [F(1, 10) = 22.8, p < 0.001] and with carrying load [F(1, 10) = 23.5, p < 0.001]. Using poles induced significantly higher Bf values regardless the grade, but this difference was only significant during downhill terrain (p < 0.05, |
Stride rate and mean ratio of frequency of stride per breath |
Stride rate was significantly influenced by grade, poles and by the interaction effect between grade x poles (p < 0.001). Stride rate values were lower with hiking poles than without (mean values of 0.88 vs. 0.92 Hz, respectively) and increased according to the following rank order: uphill < level < downhill. The lowest stride rate values occurred with hiking poles during uphill terrain (0.80 Hz, p < 0.05). The averaged ratio between rhythms of locomotion and breathing was increased with compared to without carrying load [F(1, 11) = 23.1, p < 0.01)], poles [F(1, 11) = 53.1, p < 0.001], and according to the increasing grade [F(2, 22) = 26.1, p < 0.001]. An interaction effect between experimental conditions load x hiking poles x grade was observed [F(2, 22) = 3.7, p < 0.05]. There was a significant relationship between the average ratio of locomotor movement to breathing frequency and EC of walking among all experimental conditions (r = 0.83, n = 12, SEE = 0.08, p < 0.001, Power of 0.94). |
Perceived exertion |
The RPE values were significantly higher with the grade [F(1, 11) = 68.9, p < 0.001] and the load carriage [F(2, 22) = 64.8, p < 0.001]. An interaction effect load x grade was observed [F(2, 22) = 9.1, p < 0.001] where the influence of the load was more pronounced during uphill compared with downhill and level terrain. There was no significant difference in RPE with (10.2 ± 2.3) compared to without (9.9 ± 2.6) poles. |
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This study aimed to compare physiological responses (VO2, HR, VE, VT and Bf) and RPE during walking exercise trials on different grades (0% and ± 15%), carrying or not a backpack loaded to 15% body mass, and with and without hiking poles. The main results showed that the poles influenced significantly the respiratory responses (VE and its determinants, VT and Bf) and aerobic EC according to the grade. As discussed below, the results of the present study are more or less in agreement on many points with the few studies dealing about influence of hiking poles on energy expenditure (Jacobson et al., |
Energy expenditure |
In contrast to the results of Knight and Caldwell, Energy expenditure as estimated by VO2 and EC for similar PS was influenced significantly by using poles only in downhill trials ( |
Ventilatory response patterns |
Concerning the respiratory variables, we observed a crossed effect of the hiking poles x grade on VE. During level and uphill, there were no significant differences between the conditions with and without hiking poles ( |
Stride rate and mean ratio of frequency of stride per breath |
Our results showed that the grade, the poles and interaction of both (p < 0.001) significantly influenced the stride rate. Stride rate was the lowest with the poles during uphill (0.80 Hz, p < 0.05), suggesting that the optimization of the energy expenditure (EC was not modified during trials with and without the poles) may be linked up to a modification of the locomotor rhythm. Stride rate seems therefore to determine an optimal energetic speed (Pearce et al., The average ratio between the locomotor and respiratory frequencies estimated on the last 2 min was significantly influenced by the three experimental factors tested in the present study. Our results showed clearly the influences of the slope, load carriage and use of poles on this ratio. The significant differences between the average ratio as a function of the grade (in particular during uphill), can be interpreted by the opposite changes in stride rate and Bf. Concerning the influence of the hiking poles, the proximity of the respiratory and locomotor muscles during the walking exercise with poles can explain the significantly higher average ratio with poles than without ( |
Rate of perceived exertion |
Our results did not show significant influence of the use of the hiking poles on RPE. As underlined above with HR, RPE was significantly increased during uphill and with the load carriage. These results are therefore in contradiction with those of Jacobson et al., |
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In conclusion, our results show that energy expenditure and perceived exertion during uphill and level does not change significantly with the use of hiking poles at self-selected walking speed. Optimize caloric expenditure with poles while walking at submaximal self-selected speeds was verified in the context of our study during uphill and level conditions. Interestingly, downhill walking induced higher energy expenditure and ventilatory responses with than without poles. We proposed that at self-selected walking speed, walkers who want to use poles during downhill should adapt differently breathing and mechanics of locomotion to lower energy expenditure. |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
We wish to thank for their help in data collection and technical assistance Sebastien Villard and Laura Barony. |
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY |
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REFERENCES |
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