The main finding of the present study was that men achieved higher total work, utilization of anaerobic reserve (peak and mean power - above MAP), [La] peak and power decrement, concomitantly with lower values of VO2pause (%VO2peak), compared to women during the all out exercise. No differences were observed between sexes for HRtotal, HReffort and HRpause relative to HRmax, [La] delta, VO2total or VO2effort relative to VO2peak. The higher intensity and power decrement generated by men in the entire exercise is not novel, since various studies have already reported this (Billaut et al., 2012), although the majority used a single effort or short repeated efforts (similar to the Wingate test). The novel finding is that the higher power output generated by men was sustained with the same relative VO2total, but performed with higher utilization of the anaerobic reserve. In other words, in all out exercise men exhibit a different self-pacing to women, choosing an intensity above MAP, while women set the intensity under or at MAP (see Figure 1). Self-pacing was compared between sexes (Laurent et al., 2014) in a protocol composed of all-out running (4-min effort: 1, 2 or 4-min of recovery) and men chose a higher intensity relative to MAP compared to women, 83% vs 78% in the longest recovery interval. Another result was that men exhibited lower VO2pause relative to VO2peak values during the recovery intervals than women, however with similar values in VO2total and VO2effort relative to VO2peak. Laurent et al. (2014) also measured the VO2 in men and women in high-intensity intermittent exercise, however VO2 was measured only in the final minute of the recovery periods and the VO2 was greater in women compared to men (90.8 ± 3.8 vs 85.9 ± 4.2% VO2peak) only in the longest recovery interval (4 minutes). The greatest reduction in VO2 demonstrated by men in the recovery intervals occurred in the study of Laurent et al. (2014) and in the present study could be explained by the higher aerobic fitness of men, since higher aerobic fitness allows a fast reduction in oxygen uptake during the recovery intervals (Panissa et al., 2014). Considering that the men performed higher mean power in the all out exercise with the same oxygen uptake and heart rate as the women, we can assume that in fact the difference in performance can be explained by greater anaerobic potential produced by the men. The greater reliance on the anaerobic pathways demonstrated by men could be sustained by the greater utilization of the anaerobic power reserve, since men used 27% of their anaerobic power reserve while women used only 2%. Within the literature it is not possible to explain why women did not use a higher fraction of their anaerobic reserve and more studies should be conducted to clarify this. However, observing a study that analyzed the effects of sexual dimorphism in another kind of exercise (marathon), Deaner et al. (2015) showed that women maintained mean variation of pacing of 12 % and men 16%, even when this comparison was matched by experience or corrected by differences in the final race time. In this way, it seems that different self-pacing chosen by men and women is either an isolated characteristic or in conjunction with physiological and decision-making. In the case of decision-making, men tend to adopt a higher risk strategy based on their physical fitness (Deaner et al., 2015). Moreover, men seem to be more motivated to perform exercise than women (Deaner et al., 2015). The only study that reported load (velocity) relative to maximum indices was Laurent et al. (22), however, in this study the duration of effort was too long (4 mins) making a direct comparison with the present study difficult. Moreover, it is important to highlight that the longer effort duration (4 minutes) did not allow participants to attain and maintain high loads (Tschakert et al., 2013, 2015). In relation to the higher blood lactate and respiratory exchange ratio values, there is clear evidence that the respiratory exchange ratio values are higher in men than women considering exercises equalized by intensity, due to factors such as oestrogen which can lead to greater oxidation of fatty acid by women (Devries et al., 2016). However, in the present study we believe that this also occurred due to the greater utilization of the anaerobic power reserve and consequently higher glycolytic flux that has glucose as the major substrate (Spriet, 2014). The greater power output performed by men, mainly in the initial phase of the sprints, is related to greater reliance on the anaerobic pathways and the subsequent inhibition of contractile properties (Parolin et al., 1999; Tchakert et al., 2015) in later sprints, culminating in greater power decrement. Concerning delta and peak lactate we detected just differences in lactate peak and probability it occurs due greater muscle mass presented by men. Already over respiratory exchange ratio values, there is clear evidence that the values are higher in men than women considering exercises equalized by intensity (Devries et al., 2016). In the present study we believe that this can be occurred due to the greater utilization of the anaerobic power reserve and consequently higher glycolytic flux, although we did measured the glycolytic flux it is just a speculation that has glucose as the major substrate (Spriet et al., 2014). The greater power output performed by men, mainly in the initial phase of the sprints, is related to greater reliance on the anaerobic pathways and the subsequent inhibition of contractile properties in later sprints, culminating in greater power decrement (Parolin et al., 1999; Tschakert et al., 2015). The mean heart rate (~90% of HRmax) maintained during the all out exercise indicated that this kind of exercise had a high cardiovascular solicitation; although the mean of VO2 was much lower (~80 % VO2peak). The HR is a common and highly utilized exercise intensity marker. In steady state exercise the HR/V̇O2 ratio is well established to show a linear relation (Achten and Jeukendrup, 2003), but this is not occur in incremental tests (Hofmann et al. 1997; 2001; 2005). Moreover, in high-intensity intermittent exercise HR is not able to represent exercise intensity, given that HR usually does not follow the VO2 during high-intensity intermittent exercise, especially when short-intervals (< 30 seconds) are used, since there is a delay in HR response compared with VO2 (Tschakert et al. 2013; 2015). Thus, it is important to conduct studies to verify the role of physiological and behavioural characteristics in self-paced all out exercises, using strategies to isolate these variables. For isolation of behavioural aspects (decision-making) blinded studies could be conducted (Billaut et al., 2011), mainly for women. For physiological aspects, studies using a fixed load in order to induce supramaximal values could be useful to compare variables such as the oxygen uptake, heart rate and blood lactate. Moreover, it is also possible to match men and women by aerobic fitness or by first sprint to observe these responses, as performed by Billaut and Bishop (2012), who observed differences between men and women in 20 x 5s:25s. However, when these authors carried out equalization by peak power generated in the first sprint with sub-groups, they observed that total work and power decrement were similar between men and women. Nevertheless, this study did not measure oxygen uptake and was performed with team sports athletes which permits this kind of equalization. |