Research article - (2015)14, 819 - 824 |
Metabolic Demand of Paralympic Alpine Skiing in Sit-Skiing Athletes |
Maren Goll, Michael S. F. Wiedemann, Peter Spitzenpfeil |
Key words: Paralympic winter sports, paraplegia, wheelchair exercise physiology |
Key Points |
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Experimental approach to the problem |
The study included laboratory fitness testing, skiing in standardized conditions (ski dome) and on–snow field testing on a regular outdoor slope. Measured variables were VO2, HR and blood lactate concentration [La-] during exercise testing in the laboratory prior to the respective field testing sessions. Ventilatory thresholds (VT 1, VT 2) were determined for each athlete from the fitness testing data in order to relate skiing data to three zones: below the first ventilatory threshold (<VT 1), between the first and second threshold (VT 1- VT 2) and above the second ventilatory threshold (>VT 2). During SL and GS runs cardiopulmonary data were collected, and [La-] samples were taken after each run. Relative workloads and the percentage of exposure to the threshold-zones were calculated based on the measured laboratory output values. |
Participants |
A total of six Sitting-class athletes, four male (31±5.9 years, 69 ± 10 kg, 1.76 ± 0.09 m) and two female (18.5 ± 0.7 years, 40 ± 0 kg, 1.34 ± 0.02 m), of the National Paralympic Team participated in the study. Four of the athletes participated in a pre-SL laboratory and in SL on-snow testing, five completed pre-GS laboratory tests and on-snow GS measurements. All athletes had a history of being part of the national team for at least three years and have competed on the International Paralympic Alpine Skiing World Cup circuit sanctioned by the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) for the same duration of time and were ranked among the Top 5 (female) and Top 10 (male), respectively, at the time of testing. Every athlete was internationally classified by the IPC’s sports classification panel. The process of classification according to IPC Alpine Skiing Classification Rules and Regulations (IPC, Representing the wide variation in lesions and limits our study group consisted of two LW 12-1, one LW 11, two LW 10-2 and one LW 10-1 classified athletes participating in the study. The study was approved by the ethics committee of the local School of Medicine, and written informed consent was obtained from the athletes before commencing data collection. |
Procedures |
An incremental step test was performed prior to the respective field testing session on a wall mounted handcycle ergometer with cranks operating in synchronous mode (Brachumera, Lode, The Netherlands). Initial workload for female athletes was set at 40 W and at 50 W for male athletes with a 10 W increment every 3 minutes for all athletes. All gas exchange variables were measured with a metabolic analyser ( The same parameters as in the laboratory testing were measured on snow. Standardized skiing was carried out under controlled conditions in an indoor ski dome (Snowworld Landgraaf, The Netherlands) performing a 26-gate Slalom (SL) course on an icy water-injected slope. On-snow field testing was performed on a glacier in the Austrian Alps on an evenly set 30-gate Giant-slalom (GS) course on medium steep terrain and solid snow conditions. For on-snow testing, the same mobile metabolic analyser as in the lab was used. In addition to the standard calibration, the system was calibrated for temperature, altitude, relative humidity and barometric pressure. To prevent disturbances in air flow near the sensor, a windshield for the turbine body provided by the manufacturer was applied. The small, lightweight metabolic analyser was stored underneath the jacket not interfering with the athlete’s mobility. Capillary blood samples for [La-] determination were collected from the athlete’s earlobe one minute after completion of the course with a mobile analyser from the same manufacturer as used in the laboratory tests (Lactate Scout, EKF diagnostics, Germany). Storing the hand-held analyser underneath the tester’s jacket and close to the body until sample draw temperature was consistently above the temperature range of +5°C - +45°C for reliable operation. A 5-s moving average was applied for breath-by-breath data of mobile gas exchange measures prior to further analysis. Athletes completed three GS and six SL runs in a race-like skiing manner. In order to familiarize athletes with wearing a face mask during skiing, all athletes performed two warm up runs before data collection. |
Statistical analyses |
Descriptive statistics were compiled for laboratory data as well as SL and GS data for all participating athletes, expressed in relative workload of HR (%HRmax), VO2max (%VO2max) and [La-] during exercise. Due to the small number of athletes, yet representing the country’s population, as well as athlete differences in lesion level and different classifications accordingly, means and SDs were also calculated for each athlete separately. For GS, run times were normalized at 100% and exposure to their individual threshold zones during three runs were calculated for each athlete. |
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The incremental tests for athletes participating in the pre-SL laboratory testing (n = 4) returned a VO2max of 33.1 ± 1.2 ml·kg-1·min-1 (2.1 ± 0.5 L·min-1), a HRmax of 195 ± 6 beats·min-1, and a maximum [La-] of 11.8 ± 0.9 mmol·L-1. Pre-GS laboratory testing revealed values for VO2max of 44.5 ± 4.9 ml·kg-1·min-1 (1.8 ± 0.2 L·min-1) for female athletes (n = 2) and 35 ± 3.6 ml·kg-1·min-1 (2.4 ± 0.2 L·min-1) for male athletes (n = 3). HRmax reached 188 ± 22 beats·min-1 for female and 165 ± 35.9 beats·min-1 for male athletes and maximal values of [La-] of 7.9 ± 1.2 mmol·L-1 for female athletes and [La-] of 9.3 ± 2.5 mmol·L-1 for male athletes were observed. VT 1 and VT 2 values for female athletes were 0.96 ± 0.07 L·min-1 and 1.61 ± 0.13 L·min-1, respectively. For male athletes a VT 1 of 1.13 ± 0.18 L·min-1 and a VT 2 of 1.88 ± 0.04 L·min-1 were observed. Indoor ski-dome (SL, n = 4) and on-snow (GS, n = 5) measures are expressed as a percentage of VO2max and HRmax for repeated runs of SL and GS presented in Overall, %VO2max (25.8 ± 8.2), %HRmax (60.2 ± 8.0) and [La-] (0.8 ± 0.3 mmol·L-1) during SL were lower compared to GS with 49.6 ± 4.7 %VO2max, 73.3 ± 6.6 %HRmax and [La-] = 3.1 ± 1.5 mmol·L-1, ( During three runs, all athletes remained below their VT 1 or between VT 1 and VT 2, except for 3% of one athlete’s run (Second run PA 3), so no other athlete exceeded the individual VT 2 in GS ( |
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The purpose of this study was to describe the physiological demands of Paralympic Alpine Skiing sitting athletes in laboratory and field measurements and to prove the feasibility of on-snow testing in this population. Athletes’ laboratory incremental test values showed a wide range but were generally in accordance with previously published data for handicapped athletes of sports with intermittent characteristics such as wheelchair tennis or wheelchair basketball (Bernardi et al., Interestingly, despite the small sample size and inhomogeneity in athletes’ lesion levels, metabolic strain was comparable within a single discipline, however, differed between SL and GS, findings that were additionally affirmed by results of a previous pilot study (Goll et al., In relation to able-bodied skiers, all measured physiological variables during SL and GS sit-skiing remained below the reported values for alpine-skiing (Turnbull et al., One reason for lower metabolic strain may be that the duration of our SL course, due to limited slope length in ski-dome conditions, was shorter (~30s) compared to able-bodied SL (~50s). As lactate concentration is related to intensity and duration the shorter duration of the SL runs in our study may explain at least in part the low lactate values found. For oxygen uptake according to an able-bodied skiing study with a run-time of ~45 s (Vogt et al., Heart rate values expressed as %HRmax observed in disciplines like wheelchair tennis, wheelchair basketball, or wheelchair fencing are in accordance with those observed in our study; however, the submaximal character of those sports is more likely to be ascribed to athlete’s self-pacing (Bernardi et al., |
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Based on the results of the study and concerning the physical conditioning process, it appears that neither aerobic nor anaerobic performances are crucial factors for success in Paralympic sit-skiing. Thus, aerobic training as well as general physical conditioning aiming to increase maximal oxygen uptake appears to have a secondary role compared to the specific sit-ski technique. Nevertheless it might be useful to screen athletes for medical diagnostic purposes and for a fitness state sufficient to deal with the conditions associated with their sport such as high altitude, cold, on-snow training volume and travel to ensure optimal recovery and/or stamina to endure a rigorous daily schedule. With respect to reported values in the literature (Bernardi et al., The same applies for anaerobic performance, which is also no crucial factor of sit-skiing performance. Additionally, with regard to the process of establishing evidence-based classification (Tweedy and Vanlandewijck, Investigations on external forces, strength, and motor control demands during sit-skiing could complete the profile of the sport and help gaining additional information for an optimized physical conditioning program for sit-skiing. |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
The authors wish to acknowledge the participation of the German Paralympic Alpine Ski Team and to express their gratitude especially to the sit-skiing athletes involved. The study was funded by the Federal Institute of Sports Science (BISp), Germany. Open access publishing of this work was supported by the German Research Foundation (DFG) and the Technische Universität München. There were no conflicts of interest. |
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY |
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