All Stories

  1. Isolated and Combined Effects of Cold, Heat and Hypoxia Therapies on Muscle Recovery Following Exercise-Induced Muscle Damage
  2. The carotid body mediates peak oxygen uptake during maximal physical exertion in rats
  3. Comment on: “Sports Dietitians Australia and Ultra Sports Science Foundation Joint Position Statement: A Practitioner Guide to the Prevention and Management of Exercise-Associated Gastrointestinal Perturbations and Symptoms”
  4. Effects of “Living High‐Training Low and High” on Sleep, Heart Rate Variability, and Psychological Responses in Elite Female Cyclists
  5. The effects of two days of intermittent exogenous ketosis at high altitude on baroreflex sensitivity and ventilation under hypoxic and hypercapnic conditions
  6. Psychological, Sleep, and Heart Rate Variability Responses During Early- and Middle-Term Acclimatization of “Living High-Training Low and High”
  7. Exercise-induced cardiovascular responses during combined normobaric versus hypobaric and normoxic versus hypoxic acute exposures in military air pilot trainee
  8. Impact of menopause on responses to hypoxia and incidence of acute mountain sickness
  9. Muscle deoxygenation responses are similar between repeated sprints in hypoxia performed with uni‐ versus bi‐lateral knee extensions but reduced compared to cycling
  10. Nocturnal pulse oxygen saturation dynamics at simulated high altitude: Predictive value for acute mountain sickness in healthy men born pre‐term
  11. Effect of Repeated-Sprint Training in Hypoxia in Female National-Level Rugby Union Players
  12. Perspectives of World-Class Endurance Coaches on the Evolution of Athlete Training and Performance
  13. Letter to the Editor: Solastalgia and Serendipity—at Altitude and in Academia
  14. Featured Cover
  15. Reply to Williams et al.: Fair and Safe Eligibility Criteria for Women's Sport
  16. Repeated-sprint training in hypoxia: A review with 10 years of perspective
  17. “Citius, altius, fortius” in the face of global warming: not as simple as it seems
  18. Impact of the Menstrual Cycle on the Cardiovascular and Ventilatory Responses During Exercise in Normoxia and Hypoxia
  19. Effects of preterm birth on the pattern of altitude acclimatization at rest and during moderate-intensity exercise across three days at 3,375 m
  20. Permanent mechanical and physiological responses by biofeedback wearables: worth the investment?
  21. Does “Live High–Train Low and High” Hypoxic Training Alter Stride Mechanical Pattern During Repeated Sprints in Elite Team-Sport Players?
  22. Plasma monomeric ApoA1 and high‐density lipoprotein bound ApoA1 are markedly decreased and associated with low levels of lipophilic antioxidants in sickle cell disease: A potential new pathway for therapy
  23. Fair and Safe Eligibility Criteria for Women's Sport
  24. Peak Oxygen Uptake is Slope Dependent: Insights from Ground Reaction Forces and Muscle Oxygenation in Trained Male Runners
  25. Antioxidant and neurodevelopmental gene polymorphisms in prematurely born individuals influence hypoxia-related oxidative stress
  26. Heat adaptation and resilience in a changing climate: a final call for interdisciplinary action
  27. Repeated sprint training in hypoxia induces specific skeletal muscle adaptations through S100A protein signaling
  28. Fitness Level– and Sex-Related Differences in Pulmonary Limitations to Maximal Exercise in Normoxia and Hypoxia
  29. Age and sex differences in microvascular responses during reactive hyperaemia
  30. The International Olympic Committee framework on fairness, inclusion and nondiscrimination on the basis of gender identity and sex variations does not protect fairness for female athletes
  31. Acute Responses to Repeated-Sprint Training in Hypoxia Combined With Whole-Body Cryotherapy: A Preliminary Study
  32. Comparison effect of high-intensity interval training and moderate intensity continuous training on vascular function in a mouse model of lower extremity peripheral artery disease
  33. Hypoxic, blood flow restriction, or eccentric cycling: Which training intervention is the most effective in elderly individuals?
  34. The effects of the menstrual cycle on the physiological responses to exercise in eumenorrheic women at high-altitude
  35. Hypoxia Sensing and Responses in Parkinson’s Disease
  36. Baroreflex sensitivity is blunted in hypoxia independently of changes in inspired carbon dioxide pressure in prematurely born male adults
  37. Hypoxic peripheral chemoreflex stimulation‐dependent cardiorespiratory coupling is decreased in swimmer athletes
  38. Effects of Hypoxia Severity on Muscle Oxygenation Kinetics Using Statistical Parametric Mapping During Repeated Treadmill Sprints
  39. Effects of the Birthplace Altitude and Training Volume on Hematological Characteristics in Youth and Junior Male Colombian Cyclists
  40. Women Upward—Sex Differences in Uphill Performance in Speed Climbing, Ski Mountaineering, Trail Running, Cross-Country Skiing, and Cycling
  41. Impaired cerebrovascular CO2 reactivity at high altitude in prematurely born adults
  42. Hemoglobin Mass and Blood Volume in Swimming: A Comparison Between Highly Trained, Elite, and World-Class Swimmers
  43. The V˙O2max Legacy of Hill and Lupton (1923)—100 Years On
  44. Moderate Effects of Hypoxic Training at Low and Supramaximal Intensities on Skeletal Muscle Metabolic Gene Expression in Mice
  45. Ventilatory responses to independent and combined hypoxia, hypercapnia and hypobaria in healthy pre‐term‐born adults
  46. Hot water immersion: Maintaining core body temperature above 38.5°C mitigates muscle fatigue
  47. Effects of 2 Different Protocols of Repeated-Sprint Training in Hypoxia in Elite Female Rugby Sevens Players During an Altitude Training Camp
  48. Test–retest reliability of ski‐specific aerobic, sprint, and neuromuscular performance tests in highly trained cross‐country skiers
  49. The Evolution of World-Class Endurance Training: The Scientist’s View on Current and Future Trends
  50. Re: “Barometric Pressure at High Altitude: Revisiting West's Prediction Equation, and More,” by Apte
  51. Creating awareness about exercise-based ACL prevention strategies in recreational alpine skiers
  52. Physical Performance and Skeletal Muscle Transcriptional Adaptations Are Not Impacted by Exercise Training Frequency in Mice with Lower Extremity Peripheral Artery Disease
  53. Intrahospital supervised exercise training improves survival rate among hypertensive patients with COVID-19
  54. Adaptive R-Peak Detection on Wearable ECG Sensors for High-Intensity Exercise
  55. End-tidal carbon dioxide tension is a reliable surrogate of arterial carbon dioxide tension across different oxygen, carbon dioxide and barometric pressures
  56. High-Intensity Interval Training, Performance, and Oxygen Uptake Kinetics in Highly Trained Traditional Rowers
  57. VO2max and Velocity at VO2max Play a Role in Ultradistance Trail-Running Performance
  58. Vertical and Leg Stiffness Modeling During Running: Effect of Speed and Incline
  59. Hypoxia Does Not Change Performance and Psychophysiological Responses During Repeated Cycling Sprints to Exhaustion With Short Exercise-to-Rest Ratio
  60. Flying to high-altitude destinations: Is the risk of acute mountain sickness greater?
  61. Molecular Mechanisms of High-Altitude Acclimatization
  62. Pushing the Limits of Strength Training
  63. Health Benefits of Residence at Moderate Altitude Do Not Reduce COVID-19 Mortality
  64. Sex differences in human running performance: what about mountain ultramarathon?
  65. Saxagliptin: A potential doping agent? A randomized, double‐blinded, placebo‐controlled, and crossover pilot study in young active men
  66. Muscle O 2 diffusion capacity by NIRS: A new approach in the air
  67. Last Word on Viewpoint: Premature birth: a neglected consideration for altitude adaptation
  68. Premature birth: a neglected consideration for altitude adaptation
  69. Effects of Six Weeks of Hypoxia Exposure on Hepatic Fatty Acid Metabolism in ApoE Knockout Mice Fed a High-Fat Diet
  70. The Impact of Training on the Loss of Cardiorespiratory Fitness in Aging Masters Endurance Athletes
  71. Boosting mitochondrial health to counteract neurodegeneration
  72. Hypoxia and hemorheological properties in older individuals
  73. Emotional Intelligence in Ultra-Marathon Runners: Implications for Recovery Strategy and Stress Responses during an Ultra-Endurance Race
  74. Left ventricular function and mechanics in backs and forwards elite rugby union players
  75. The athletic characteristics of Olympic sports to assist anti‐doping strategies
  76. The interplay of hypoxic and mental stress: Implications for anxiety and depressive disorders
  77. Urine and Fecal 1H-NMR Metabolomes Differ Significantly between Pre-Term and Full-Term Born Physically Fit Healthy Adult Males
  78. Respiratory responses to hypoxia during rest and exercise in individuals born pre-term: a state-of-the-art review
  79. Multi-hosting UEFA European Football Championship: fair enough between participating teams?
  80. RMSSD Is More Sensitive to Artifacts Than Frequency-Domain Parameters: Implication in Athletes’ Monitoring
  81. Alterations in spontaneous electrical brain activity after an extreme mountain ultramarathon
  82. Kinetics of neuropeptide Y, catecholamines, and physiological responses during moderate and heavy intensity exercises
  83. Effects of repeated-sprint training in hypoxia induced by voluntary hypoventilation on performance during ice hockey off-season
  84. Dietary Nitrate Supplementation Is Not Helpful for Endurance Performance at Simulated Altitude Even When Combined With Intermittent Normobaric Hypoxic Training
  85. Post-exercise accumulation of interstitial lung water is greater in hypobaric than normobaric hypoxia in adults born prematurely
  86. Neuromuscular fatigability during repeated sprints assessed with an innovative cycle ergometer
  87. Exercise–microbiota interactions in aging‐related sarcopenia
  88. Does Regular Physical Activity Mitigate the Age-Associated Decline in Pulmonary Function?
  89. Effects of Active Preconditioning With Local and Systemic Hypoxia on Submaximal Cycling
  90. Hypoxia Conditioning for High-Altitude Pre-acclimatization
  91. Effects of Pre-Term Birth on the Cardio-Respiratory Responses to Hypoxic Exercise in Children
  92. Can melatonin be used as a potential antioxidant and sleep aid supplement for high-altitude travelers?
  93. Is Hypoxic/Altitude Training an Important Topic in the Field of Hypoxia?
  94. Similar Supine Heart Rate Variability Changes During 24-h Exposure to Normobaric vs. Hypobaric Hypoxia
  95. Long-Term Effects of Prematurity on Resting Ventilatory Response to Hypercapnia
  96. Association of Cycling With All-Cause and Cardiovascular Disease Mortality Among Persons With Diabetes
  97. Fatal attraction – The role of hypoxia when alpha-synuclein gets intimate with mitochondria
  98. Training During the COVID-19 Lockdown: Knowledge, Beliefs, and Practices of 12,526 Athletes from 142 Countries and Six Continents
  99. Olympic Sports Science—Bibliometric Analysis of All Summer and Winter Olympic Sports Research
  100. Conditioning the Brain: From Exercise to Hypoxia
  101. Sex-dependent blood pressure regulation in acute hypoxia
  102. Brain Region and Cell Compartment Dependent Regulation of Electron Transport System Components in Huntington’s Disease Model Mice
  103. Moderate Altitude Residence Reduces Male Colorectal and Female Breast Cancer Mortality More Than Incidence: Therapeutic Implications?
  104. Is Altitude Training Bad for the Running Mechanics of Middle-Distance Runners?
  105. Indirect Estimation of Breathing Rate from Heart Rate Monitoring System during Running
  106. Muscle strength explains the protective effect of physical activity against COVID-19 hospitalization among adults aged 50 years and older
  107. Muscle strength is associated with COVID‐19 hospitalization in adults 50 years of age or older
  108. Opportunities and obstacles of translating elite sport research to public health
  109. Hypoxia and brain aging: Neurodegeneration or neuroprotection?
  110. The central role of mitochondrial fitness on antiviral defenses: An advocacy for physical activity during the COVID-19 pandemic
  111. Comparing Hypoxic and Heat Stressors: More Challenging Than it Seems
  112. Level, Uphill, and Downhill Running Economy Values Are Correlated Except on Steep Slopes
  113. High-Intensity Interval Training and Moderate-Intensity Continuous Training Attenuate Oxidative Damage and Promote Myokine Response in the Skeletal Muscle of ApoE KO Mice on High-Fat Diet
  114. High‐intensity exercise in hypoxia improves endothelial function via increased nitric oxide bioavailability in C57BL/6 mice
  115. The Muscle-Brain Axis and Neurodegenerative Diseases: The Key Role of Mitochondria in Exercise-Induced Neuroprotection
  116. Effect of hypoxia and nitrate supplementation on different high-intensity interval-training sessions
  117. Editorial: Youth and Winter Sports
  118. Does living at moderate altitudes in Austria affect mortality rates of various causes? An ecological study
  119. Obesity and Mortality Among Patients Diagnosed With COVID-19
  120. Eleven Years’ Monitoring of the World’s Most Successful Male Biathlete of the Last Decade
  121. Impact of High Altitude on Cardiovascular Health: Current Perspectives
  122. Hypoxia, Acidification and Inflammation: Partners in Crime in Parkinson’s Disease Pathogenesis?
  123. Continuous Analysis of Marathon Running Using Inertial Sensors: Hitting Two Walls?
  124. Sleep Deprivation Deteriorates Heart Rate Variability and Photoplethysmography
  125. Evaluation of a Strength-Training Program on Clinical Outcomes in Older Adults
  126. Maximal and Submaximal Cardiorespiratory Responses to a Novel Graded Karate Test
  127. Muscle Strength Explains the Protective Effect of Physical Activity against COVID-19 Hospitalization among Adults aged 50 Years and Older
  128. Hypoxia Conditioning as a Promising Therapeutic Target in Parkinson's Disease?
  129. Hypoxic Respiratory Chemoreflex Control in Young Trained Swimmers
  130. Muscle strength is associated with COVID-19 hospitalization in adults 50 years of age or older
  131. Effects of Normobaric Hypoxia on Matched-severe Exercise and Power-duration Relationship
  132. A Rationale for Hypoxic and Chemical Conditioning in Huntington’s Disease
  133. Response to: The mitochondria-targeted antioxidant MitoQ attenuates exercise-induced mitochondrial DNA damage (Williamson et al., available online 6 August 2020, 101,673)
  134. Altitude and COVID‐19: Friend or foe? A narrative review
  135. On the Use of the Repeated-Sprint Training in Hypoxia in Tennis
  136. Re: “The Effect of an Expiratory Resistance Mask With Dead Space on Sleep, Acute Mountain Sickness, Cognition, and Ventilatory Acclimatization in Normobaric Hypoxia,” by Patrician et al. and “Global REACH 2018: The Effect of an Expiratory Resist...
  137. Low cardiorespiratory and mitochondrial fitness as risk factors in viral infections: implications for COVID-19
  138. High-intensity Activity in European vs. National Rugby Union Games in the best 2014–2015 Team
  139. Effects of COVID-19 lockdown on heart rate variability
  140. Do twelve normobaric hypoxic exposures indeed provoke relevant acclimatization for high-altitude workers?
  141. How does playing position affect fatigue-induced changes in high-intensity locomotor and micro-movements patterns during professional rugby union games?
  142. Cognitive Impairment During Combined Normobaric vs. Hypobaric and Normoxic vs. Hypoxic Acute Exposure
  143. Quantitative Magnetic Resonance Imaging Assessment of the Quadriceps Changes during an Extreme Mountain Ultramarathon
  144. Mitochondria: In the Cross Fire of SARS-CoV-2 and Immunity
  145. Running mechanics and leg muscle activity patterns during early and late acceleration phases of repeated treadmill sprints in male recreational athletes
  146. Cardiovascular Consequences of Acute Kidney Injury
  147. Preterm birth: Potential risk factor for greater COVID-19 severity?
  148. Minimal Influence of Hypobaria on Heart Rate Variability in Hypoxia and Normoxia
  149. (Indoor) isolation, stress, and physical inactivity: Vicious circles accelerated by COVID‐19?
  150. Jumping at the opportunity: Promoting physical activity after COVID‐19
  151. Caution is needed on the effect of altitude on the pathogenesis of SAR-CoV-2 virus
  152. Effects of COVID-19 lockdown on heart rate variability
  153. Central and peripheral muscle fatigue following repeated‐sprint running in moderate and severe hypoxia
  154. Editorial: Human Ultra-Endurance Exercise
  155. Effect of pre-term birth on oxidative stress responses to normoxic and hypoxic exercise
  156. Insights for Blood Flow Restriction and Hypoxia in Leg Versus Arm Submaximal Exercise
  157. Cardio-respiratory, oxidative stress and acute mountain sickness responses to normobaric and hypobaric hypoxia in prematurely born adults
  158. Mechanisms of neuromuscular fatigue and recovery in unilateral versus bilateral maximal voluntary contractions
  159. Hypoxic exercise as an effective nonpharmacological therapeutic intervention
  160. Relationship between cardiorespiratory phase coherence during hypoxia and genetic polymorphism in humans
  161. Defining Off-road Running: A Position Statement from the Ultra Sports Science Foundation
  162. CrossTalk proposal: Barometric pressure, independent of , is the forgotten parameter in altitude physiology and mountain medicine
  163. Rebuttal from Grégoire P. Millet and Tadej Debevec
  164. Drift-Free Foot Orientation Estimation in Running Using Wearable IMU
  165. Hypoxic Training Is Beneficial in Elite Athletes
  166. Specific effect of hypobaria on cerebrovascular hypercapnic responses in hypoxia
  167. Changes in spatio-temporal gait parameters and vertical speed during an extreme mountain ultra-marathon
  168. The fatigue-induced alteration in postural control is larger in hypobaric than in normobaric hypoxia
  169. Effects of pre‐induced fatigue vs . concurrent pain on exercise tolerance, neuromuscular performance and corticospinal responses of locomotor muscles
  170. Cardiovascular and Cerebral Responses During a Vasovagal Reaction Without Syncope
  171. Wales Anaerobic Test: Reliability and Fitness Profiles of International Rugby Union Players
  172. Quantification of Neuropeptide Y and Four of Its Metabolites in Human Plasma by Micro-UHPLC-MS/MS
  173. A systematic review on self‐determination theory in physical education
  174. Active Preconditioning With Blood Flow Restriction or/and Systemic Hypoxic Exposure Does Not Improve Repeated Sprint Cycling Performance
  175. Positive expiratory pressure improves arterial and cerebral oxygenation in acute normobaric and hypobaric hypoxia
  176. High-Intensity Exercise With Blood Flow Restriction or in Hypoxia as Valuable Spaceflight Countermeasures?
  177. Vascular and oxygenation responses of local ischemia and systemic hypoxia during arm cycling repeated sprints
  178. Influence of Altitude on Elite Biathlon Performances
  179. Separate and combined effects of local and systemic hypoxia in resistance exercise
  180. More on the Record-Breaking Performance in a 70-Year-Old Marathoner
  181. Ischemic Preconditioning Maintains Performance on Two 5-km Time Trials in Hypoxia
  182. Physiological adaptations to repeated sprint training in hypoxia induced by voluntary hypoventilation at low lung volume
  183. Space Medicine in the Era of Civilian Spaceflight
  184. Leg- vs arm-cycling repeated sprints with blood flow restriction and systemic hypoxia
  185. Repeated sprint training in hypoxia – an innovative method
  186. Energy-saving walking mechanisms in obese adults
  187. Editorial: Recent Evolutions and Perspectives in Olympic Winter Sports Performance: To PyeongChang and Beyond…
  188. Sports and Active Living Are Medicine, and Education, Happiness, Performance, Business, Innovation, and Culture…for a Sustainable World
  189. Neuromuscular evaluation of arm-cycling repeated sprints under hypoxia and/or blood flow restriction
  190. Exercise Overrides Blunted Hypoxic Ventilatory Response in Prematurely Born Men
  191. Acute responses to On-Court Repeated-Sprint Training Performed With Blood Flow Restriction vs Systemic Hypoxia in Elite Badminton Athletes
  192. On Top to the Top - Acclimatization Strategy for the “Fastest Known Time” to Everest
  193. Photoplethysmography Detection of Overreaching
  194. Comparison of Game Movement Positional Profiles Between Professional Club and Senior International Rugby Union Players
  195. Cerebral and Muscle Oxygenation during Repeated Shuttle Run Sprints with Hypoventilation
  196. Upper-body repeated-sprint training in hypoxia in international rugby union players
  197. Supramaximal Intensity Hypoxic Exercise and Vascular Function Assessment in Mice
  198. Is Maximal Heart Rate Decrease Similar Between Normobaric Versus Hypobaric Hypoxia in Trained and Untrained Subjects?
  199. Effects of exercise in normobaric hypoxia on hemodynamics during muscle metaboreflex activation in normoxia
  200. Level Versus Uphill Economy and Mechanical Responses in Elite Ultra-Trail Runners
  201. Postural Control Follows a Bi-Phasic Alteration Pattern During Mountain Ultra-Marathon
  202. The Determinants of the Preferred Walking Speed in Individuals with Obesity
  203. Analysis of U-Shape Patterns in RR-Interval Time Series During Sleep
  204. Repeated-Sprint Training in Hypoxia in International Rugby Union Players
  205. Differences within Elite Female Tennis Players during an Incremental Field Test
  206. “Live High-Train Low” Paradigm: Moving the Debate Forward
  207. Altitude-induced responses observed in the control group
  208. Overload blunts baroreflex only in overreached athletes
  209. Oxygenation time course and neuromuscular fatigue during repeated cycling sprints with bilateral blood flow restriction
  210. Commentaries on Viewpoint: V̇o2peak is an acceptable estimate of cardiorespiratory fitness but not V̇o2max
  211. Effects of Different Training Intensity Distributions Between Elite Cross-Country Skiers and Nordic-Combined Athletes During Live High-Train Low
  212. Cognitive performance and self-reported sleepiness are modulated by time-of-day during a mountain ultramarathon
  213. Preterm birth and oxidative stress: Effects of acute physical exercise and hypoxia physiological responses
  214. Shock microcycle of repeated-sprint training in hypoxia and tennis performance: Case study in a rookie professional player
  215. Influence of Training Load and Altitude on Heart Rate Variability Fatigue Patterns in Elite Nordic Skiers
  216. Accurate Estimation of Running Temporal Parameters Using Foot-Worn Inertial Sensors
  217. Adaptations in muscle oxidative capacity, fiber size, and oxygen supply capacity after repeated-sprint training in hypoxia combined with chronic hypoxic exposure
  218. Effects of Short-Term Normobaric Hypoxic Walking Training on Energetics and Mechanics of Gait in Adults with Obesity
  219. The 2018 Lake Louise Acute Mountain Sickness Score
  220. Heart rate recovery of individuals undergoing cardiac rehabilitation after acute coronary syndrome
  221. Perceptually Regulated Exercise Test Allows Determination of V˙O2max and Ventilatory Threshold But Not Respiratory Compensation Point In Trained Runners
  222. Repeated-sprint training in hypoxia induced by voluntary hypoventilation improves running repeated-sprint ability in rugby players
  223. Commentaries on Viewpoint: Resistance training and exercise tolerance during high-intensity exercise: moving beyond just running economy and muscle strength
  224. How accurate is visual determination of foot strike pattern and pronation assessment
  225. Commentaries on Viewpoint: Principles, insights, and potential pitfalls of the noninvasive determination of muscle oxidative capacity by near-infrared spectroscopy
  226. Updated analysis of changes in locomotor activities across periods in an international ice hockey game
  227. Is live high–train low altitude training relevant for elite athletes? Flawed analysis from inaccurate data
  228. Live high–train low guided by daily heart rate variability in elite Nordic-skiers
  229. The Energetics during the World's Most Challenging Mountain Ultra-Marathon—A Case Study at the Tor des Geants®
  230. Editorial: High-Intensity Exercise in Hypoxia: Beneficial Aspects and Potential Drawbacks
  231. Do male athletes with already high initial haemoglobin mass benefit from ‘live high-train low’ altitude training?
  232. Changes in Muscle and Cerebral Deoxygenation and Perfusion during Repeated Sprints in Hypoxia to Exhaustion
  233. Acute effects of repeated cycling sprints in hypoxia induced by voluntary hypoventilation
  234. Does the Running Economy Really Increase after Ultra-Marathons?
  235. Acute and chronic changes in baroreflex sensitivity in hypobaric vs. normobaric hypoxia
  236. Oxygen Uptake Kinetics Is Slower in Swimming Than Arm Cranking and Cycling during Heavy Intensity
  237. Technical Alterations during an Incremental Field Test in Elite Male Tennis Players
  238. Minimal Window Duration for Accurate HRV Recording in Athletes
  239. Individual hemoglobin mass response to normobaric and hypobaric “live high–train low”: A one-year crossover study
  240. Hypoxic dose, intensity distribution, and fatigue monitoring are paramount for “live high-train low” effectiveness
  241. Effects of Altitude/Hypoxia on Single- and Multiple-Sprint Performance: A Comprehensive Review
  242. Effects of Ultratrail Running on Skeletal-Muscle Oxygenation Dynamics
  243. Lower limb mechanical asymmetry during repeated treadmill sprints
  244. Mechanical Alterations during 800-m Self-Paced Track Running
  245. Repeated-Sprint Training in Hypoxia Induced by Voluntary Hypoventilation in Swimming
  246. Repeated maximal-intensity hypoxic exercise superimposed to hypoxic residence boosts skeletal muscle transcriptional responses in elite team-sport athletes
  247. Short- or long-rest intervals during repeated-sprint training in soccer?
  248. Effects of Repeated-Sprint Training in Hypoxia on Sea-Level Performance: A Meta-Analysis
  249. Hypoxia-Induced Oxidative Stress Modulation with Physical Activity
  250. Sex and Exercise Intensity Do Not Influence Oxygen Uptake Kinetics in Submaximal Swimming
  251. Walking in Hypoxia: An Efficient Treatment to Lessen Mechanical Constraints and Improve Health in Obese Individuals?
  252. Commentaries on Viewpoint: Human skeletal muscle wasting in hypoxia: a matter of hypoxic dose?
  253. Mechanical Alterations Associated with Repeated Treadmill Sprinting under Heat Stress
  254. Extreme Mountain Ultra-Marathon Leads to Acute but Transient Increase in Cerebral Water Diffusivity and Plasma Biomarkers Levels Changes
  255. Mechanical alterations during interval-training treadmill runs in high-level male team-sport players
  256. Psychophysiological Responses to Repeated-Sprint Training in Normobaric Hypoxia and Normoxia
  257. Clarification on altitude training
  258. Correction: Shear-Wave Elastography Assessments of Quadriceps Stiffness Changes prior to, during and after Prolonged Exercise: A Longitudinal Study during an Extreme Mountain Ultra-Marathon
  259. An Extreme Mountain Ultra-Marathon Decreases the Cost of Uphill Walking and Running
  260. Altitud y deportes de equipo: métodos tradicionales desafiados por un entrenamiento innovador y específico en hipoxia. ]Altitude and team sports: traditional methods challenged by innovative sport-specific training in hypoxia].
  261. Do maximal aerobic power and anaerobic capacity start really to decrease at the fourth decade of life?
  262. Sleep Disordered Breathing During Live High-Train Low in Normobaric Versus Hypobaric Hypoxia
  263. Shear-Wave Elastography Assessments of Quadriceps Stiffness Changes prior to, during and after Prolonged Exercise: A Longitudinal Study during an Extreme Mountain Ultra-Marathon
  264. Hamstring Architectural and Functional Adaptations Following Long vs. Short Muscle Length Eccentric Training
  265. Comparison of Sleep Disorders between Real and Simulated 3,450-m Altitude
  266. Mechanical Alterations to Repeated Treadmill Sprints in Normobaric Hypoxia
  267. Does altitude level of a prior time-trial modify subsequent exercise performance in hypoxia and associated neuromuscular responses?
  268. Commentaries on Viewpoint: Time for a new metric for hypoxic dose?Commentaries on Viewpoint: Time for a new metric for hypoxic dose?Commentaries on Viewpoint: Time for a new metric for hypoxic dose?Commentaries on Viewpoint: Time for a new metric for h...
  269. Running Mechanics During the World’s Most Challenging Mountain Ultramarathon
  270. Response
  271. Therapeutic Use of Exercising in Hypoxia: Promises and Limitations
  272. Progressive and biphasic cardiac responses during extreme mountain ultramarathon
  273. Intrasession and Intersession Reliability of Running Mechanics During Treadmill Sprints
  274. Same Performance Changes after Live High-Train Low in Normobaric vs. Hypobaric Hypoxia
  275. FemHab: The effects of bed rest and hypoxia on oxidative stress in healthy women
  276. On the Use of a Test to Exhaustion Specific to Tennis (TEST) with Ball Hitting by Elite Players
  277. Cycling Time Trial Is More Altered in Hypobaric than Normobaric Hypoxia
  278. Similar Hemoglobin Mass Response in Hypobaric and Normobaric Hypoxia in Athletes
  279. High Altitude Increases Alteration in Maximal Torque but Not in Rapid Torque Development in Knee Extensors after Repeated Treadmill Sprinting
  280. Exposure to hypobaric hypoxia results in higher oxidative stress compared to normobaric hypoxia
  281. Repeated Cycling Sprints with Different Restricted Blood Flow Levels
  282. Biomechanical Changes During a 50-minute Run in Different Footwear and on Various Slopes
  283. Influence on Strength and Flexibility of a Swing Phase–Specific Hamstring Eccentric Program in Sprinters' General Preparation
  284. Apparent Diffusion coefficient (ADC), T1 and T2 quantitative indexes of the myocardium in athletes before, during and after extreme mountain ultra-marathon: correlation with myocardial damages and inflammation biomarkers
  285. Association of Hematological Variables with Team-Sport Specific Fitness Performance
  286. Front-crawl stroke descriptors variability assessment for skill characterisation
  287. Monitoring Fatigue Status with HRV Measures in Elite Athletes: An Avenue Beyond RMSSD?
  288. Response
  289. The increase in hydric volume is associated to contractile impairment in the calf after the world’s most extreme mountain ultra-marathon
  290. Running mechanical alterations during repeated treadmill sprints in hotversushypoxic environments. A pilot study
  291. “Live High–Train Low and High” Hypoxic Training Improves Team-Sport Performance
  292. Comparison of Four Sections for Analyzing Running Mechanics Alterations During Repeated Treadmill Sprints
  293. Neuro-mechanical determinants of repeated treadmill sprints - Usefulness of an “hypoxic to normoxic recovery” approach
  294. The Effect of Two Speed Endurance Training Regimes on Performance of Soccer Players
  295. Commentaries on Viewpoint: Can elite athletes benefit from dietary nitrate supplementation?
  296. Prooxidant/Antioxidant Balance in Hypoxia: A Cross-Over Study on Normobaric vs. Hypobaric “Live High-Train Low”
  297. Is the Wet-Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT) Index Relevant for Exercise in the Heat?
  298. Circadian variation of salivary immunoglobin A, alpha-amylase activity and mood in response to repeated double-poling sprints in hypoxia
  299. Typology of “Fatigue” by Heart Rate Variability Analysis in Elite Nordic-skiers
  300. Correction: Comparison of “Live High-Train Low” in Normobaric versus Hypobaric Hypoxia
  301. Emerging Environmental and Weather Challenges in Outdoor Sports
  302. A Bayesian approach for pervasive estimation of breaststroke velocity using a wearable IMU
  303. Repeated Double-Poling Sprint Training in Hypoxia by Competitive Cross-country Skiers
  304. Changes in leg spring behaviour, plantar loading and foot mobility magnitude induced by an exhaustive treadmill run in adolescent middle-distance runners
  305. A pilot study on quantification of training load: The use of HRV in training practice
  306. Influence of Weather, Rank, and Home Advantage on Football Outcomes in the Gulf Region
  307. High-Intensity Running and Plantar-Flexor Fatigability and Plantar-Pressure Distribution in Adolescent Runners
  308. Can analysis of performance and neuromuscular recoveries from repeated sprints shed more light on its fatigue-causing mechanisms?
  309. High-Intensity Intermittent Training in Hypoxia
  310. Comparison of “Live High-Train Low” in Normobaric versus Hypobaric Hypoxia
  311. Neuro-mechanical and metabolic adjustments to the repeated anaerobic sprint test in professional football players
  312. Outdoor exercise performance in ambient heat: Time to overcome challenging factors?
  313. Responses to Exercise in Normobaric Hypoxia: Comparison of Elite and Recreational Ski Mountaineers
  314. The Impact of Triathlon Training and Racing on Athletes’ General Health
  315. Sleep apnea detection using features from the respiration and the ecg recorded with smart-shirts
  316. Changes in lung function during an extreme mountain ultramarathon
  317. Coordination Pattern Adaptability: Energy Cost of Degenerate Behaviors
  318. Accuracy of Indirect Estimation of Power Output From Uphill Performance in Cycling
  319. Inter-limb coordination and energy cost in swimming
  320. Coordination Pattern Variability Provides Functional Adaptations to Constraints in Swimming Performance
  321. Effects of Intermittent Training on Anaerobic Performance and MCT Transporters in Athletes
  322. Discerning normobaric and hypobaric hypoxia: significance of exposure duration
  323. Relationships between anthropometric measures and athletic performance, with special reference to repeated-sprint ability, in the Qatar national soccer team
  324. Estimation of Front-Crawl Energy Expenditure Using Wearable Inertial Measurement Units
  325. 0108: Specific alterations in cardiac function induced by a 300km mountain ultra-marathon
  326. Correction: Alterations in Postural Control during the World's Most Challenging Mountain Ultra-Marathon
  327. Tapering for Marathon and Cardiac Autonomic Function
  328. Influence of the world’s most challenging mountain ultra-marathon on energy cost and running mechanics
  329. Alterations in Postural Control during the World's Most Challenging Mountain Ultra-Marathon
  330. Moderate Exercise Blunts Oxidative Stress Induced by Normobaric Hypoxic Confinement
  331. Position statement—altitude training for improving team-sport players’ performance: current knowledge and unresolved issues
  332. Advancing hypoxic training in team sports: from intermittent hypoxic training to repeated sprint training in hypoxia: Table 1
  333. Hypoxic training and team sports: a challenge to traditional methods?
  334. On the use of mobile inflatable hypoxic marquees for sport-specific altitude training in team sports
  335. Effect of hip flexion angle on hamstring optimum length after a single set of concentric contractions
  336. Conceptual Framework for Strengthening Exercises to Prevent Hamstring Strains
  337. Fatigue Shifts and Scatters Heart Rate Variability in Elite Endurance Athletes
  338. Performance Analysis of Sport IX
  339. Automatic front-crawl temporal phase detection using adaptive filtering of inertial signals
  340. Alterations of Neuromuscular Function after the World's Most Challenging Mountain Ultra-Marathon
  341. A Hidden Markov Model of the breaststroke swimming temporal phases using wearable inertial measurement units
  342. Towards estimation of front-crawl energy expenditure using the wearable aquatic movement analysis system (WAMAS)
  343. Changes in Running Mechanics and Spring-Mass Behaviour during a 5-km Time Trial
  344. Evidence for Differences Between Hypobaric and Normobaric Hypoxia Is Conclusive
  345. Significant Molecular and Systemic Adaptations after Repeated Sprint Training in Hypoxia
  346. Changes in running mechanics and spring-mass behaviour induced by a 5-hour hilly running bout
  347. Ventilation, Oxidative Stress, and Nitric Oxide in Hypobaric versus Normobaric Hypoxia
  348. Gaussian process framework for pervasive estimation of swimming velocity with body‐worn IMU
  349. Hypoxic Conditions and Exercise-to-Rest Ratio are Likely Paramount
  350. Hypoxic Conditions and Exercise-to-Rest Ratio are Likely Paramount
  351. Relationships between anthropometric factors and repeated-sprint ability in the Qatar national soccer team
  352. Front-Crawl Instantaneous Velocity Estimation Using a Wearable Inertial Measurement Unit
  353. Economy is not sacrificed in ultramarathon runners
  354. Ultramarathon is an outstanding model for the study of adaptive responses to extreme load and stress
  355. Does ‘altitude training’ increase exercise performance in elite athletes?
  356. Influence of Hip-Flexion Angle on Hamstrings Isokinetic Activity in Sprinters
  357. International Olympic Committee consensus statement on thermoregulatory and altitude challenges for high-level athletes
  358. Last Word on Point: Counterpoint: Hypobaric hypoxia induces different responses from normobaric hypoxia
  359. Point: Counterpoint: Hypobaric hypoxia induces/does not induce different responses from normobaric hypoxia
  360. Comparison of plantar pressure distribution in adolescent runners at low vs. high running velocity
  361. Corrigendum
  362. Hypobaric versus Normobaric Hypoxia: Same Effects on Postural Stability?
  363. Ineffective normobaric LHTL: room confinement or inappropriate training intensity?
  364. Oxygen uptake kinetics and middle distance swimming performance
  365. Effects of a 5-h hilly running on ankle plantar and dorsal flexor force and fatigability
  366. Alteration in neuromuscular function after a 5 km running time trial
  367. Effects of aerobic fitness on oxygen uptake kinetics in heavy intensity swimming
  368. Physiological requirements in triathlon
  369. Effects of salbutamol on the contractile properties of human skeletal muscle before and after fatigue
  370. Repeated sprinting on natural grass impairs vertical stiffness but does not alter plantar loading in soccer players
  371. Commentaries on Viewpoint: The two-hour marathon: Who and when?
  372. Repeated sprinting on natural grass impairs vertical stiffness but doesn't alter plantar loading in Qatari soccer players
  373. Fructose and glucose co-ingestion during prolonged exercise increases lactate and glucose fluxes and oxidation compared with an equimolar intake of glucose
  374. Changes in spring-mass model characteristics during repeated running sprints
  375. A new method to measure rolling resistance in treadmill cycling
  376. Faster oxygen uptake kinetics during recovery is related to better repeated sprinting ability
  377. The Authorʼs Reply
  378. Plantar pressures in the tennis serve
  379. Changes In Spring-mass Model Characteristics During Repeated Running Sprints
  380. Two Days of Hypoxic Exposure Increased Ventilation Without Affecting Performance
  381. Changes in leg-spring behavior during a 5000m self-paced run in differently trained athletes
  382. Comments on Point:Counterpoint: Afferent feedback from fatigued locomotor muscles is/is not an important determinant of endurance exercise performance
  383. Triathlon Event Distance Specialization: Training and Injury Effects
  384. Combining Hypoxic Methods for Peak Performance
  385. Alteration of neuromuscular function in squash
  386. Spinal modulations accompany peripheral fatigue during prolonged tennis playing
  387. Comments on Point:Counterpoint: The kinetics of oxygen uptake during muscular exercise do/do not manifest time-delayed phases
  388. Électrostimulation des muscles plantaires et chute de l’os naviculaire
  389. Physical Determinants of Tennis Performance in Competitive Teenage Players
  390. Comments on Point:Counterpoint: The interpolated twitch does/does not provide a valid measure of the voluntary activation of muscle
  391. Oxygen Uptake Kinetics In Heavy Intensity Exercise And Endurance Performance In Swimmers
  392. Performance Level Has No Influence On The Oxygen Uptake Kinetics During A 5-km Race
  393. Cardiorespiratory responses during running and sport-specific exercises in handball players
  394. Running versus strength-based warm-up: acute effects on isometric knee extension function
  395. The relationship between monocarboxylate transporters 1 and 4 expression in skeletal muscle and endurance performance in athletes
  396. Neuromuscular Fatigue in Racquet Sports
  397. Physiological Differences Between Cycling and Running
  398. Cardiorespiratory and Cardiac Autonomic Responses to 30-15 Intermittent Fitness Test in Team Sport Players
  399. Neuromuscular fatigue during a prolonged intermittent exercise: Application to tennis
  400. Effect of intermittent hypoxic training on HIF gene expression in human skeletal muscle and leukocytes
  401. Pacing during an elite Olympic distance triathlon: Comparison between male and female competitors
  402. Paradoxical effects of endurance training and chronic hypoxia on myofibrillar ATPase activity
  403. Altitude, Heart Rate Variability and Aerobic Capacities
  404. Predicting Intermittent Running Performance: Critical Velocity versus Endurance Index
  405. Neuromuscular Fatigue in Racquet Sports
  406. Supramaximal Training and Postexercise Parasympathetic Reactivation in Adolescents
  407. Challenging a Dogma of Exercise Physiology
  408. Nutrition for distance events
  409. Effects of the playing surface on plantar pressures and potential injuries in tennis
  410. Electrostimulation improves muscle perfusion but does not affect either muscle deoxygenation or pulmonary oxygen consumption kinetics during a heavy constant-load exercise
  411. Effect of Sleep Deprivation on Anxiety and Perceived Fatigue During a One-Man Atlantic Ocean Crossing on a Sport Catamaran
  412. The effects of exercise intensity or drafting during swimming on subsequent cycling performance in triathletes
  413. GAME ANALYSIS AND ENERGY REQUIREMENTSL OF ELITE SQUASH
  414. INFLUENCE OF RESTRICTED KNEE MOTION DURING THE FLAT FIRST SERVE IN TENNIS
  415. Effects of intermittent hypoxic training on cycling performance in well-trained athletes
  416. Comparaison de la répartition des appuis plantaires entre chaussures d'entraînement et chaussures à pointes chez de jeunes sprinters
  417. EFFECTS OF DRY-LAND VS.RESISTED-AND ASSISTED-SPRINT EXERCISES ON SWIMMING SPRINT PERFORMANCES
  418. Game Analysis and Energy Requirements of Elite Squash
  419. Influence of Restricted Knee Motion During the Flat First Serve in Tennis
  420. Effects of Dry-Land vs. Resisted- and Assisted-Sprint Exercises on Swimming Sprint Performances
  421. Effects of intermittent hypoxic training on amino and fatty acid oxidative combustion in human permeabilized muscle fibers
  422. Leukocyte's Hif-1 Expression and Training-Induced Erythropoietic Response in Swimmers
  423. Specific incremental field test for aerobic fitness in tennis
  424. Influence of “living high–training low” on aerobic performance and economy of work in elite athletes
  425. Changes in exercise characteristics, maximal voluntary contraction, and explosive strength during prolonged tennis playing
  426. Assessing the limitations of the Banister model in monitoring training
  427. Effects of Pre-Exercise Ingestion of Galactose, Glucose and Fructose on Endurance Performance
  428. Student Colloquium – Atypical Careers in Sports Medicine -- NASA, Firefighters, Olympic Training Center Sport Science, and Forensics
  429. Living high–training low: effect on erythropoiesis and aerobic performance in highly-trained swimmers
  430. Physiological responses during submaximal interval swimming training: Effects of interval duration
  431. Specific incremental test in elite squash players
  432. Specificity of V˙o2max and the ventilatory threshold in free swimming and cycle ergometry: comparison between triathletes and swimmers
  433. Responses to Intermittent Swimming Sets at Velocity Associated With max
  434. Heart Rate Variability and Performance at Two Different Altitudes in Well-Trained Swimmers
  435. Effects of intra-session concurrent endurance and strength training sequence on aerobic performance and capacity
  436. Modelling the Relationships between Training, Anxiety, and Fatigue in Elite Athletes
  437. Relationship between oxygen uptake kinetics and performance in repeated running sprints
  438. Relations entre la consommation d’oxygène et des mesures accélérométriques en course à pied sur piste
  439. The Isocapnic Buffering Phase and Mechanical Efficiency: Relationship to Cycle Time Trial Performance of Short and Long Duration
  440. MODELING THE RESIDUAL EFFECTS AND THRESHOLD SATURATION OF TRAINING
  441. Comparaison de l’efficacité de trois modalités d’entraînement chez des joueurs de tennis
  442. Modeling the Residual Effects and Threshold Saturation of Training: A Case Study of Olympic Swimmers
  443. Effects of Hypoxic Interval Training on Cycling Performance
  444. Killing time: drug and alcohol problems among asylum seekers in the Netherlands
  445. Effet de l’intensité de course sur la force de poussée en rugby
  446. The Physiological Responses to Running After Cycling in Elite Junior and Senior Triathletes
  447. Effects of increased intensity of intermittent training in runners with differing V̇O2 kinetics
  448. Responses to Different Intermittent Runs at Velocity Associated With
  449. Addition of inspiratory resistance increases the amplitude of the slow component of O2 uptake kinetics
  450. Alteration of Neuromuscular Function After a Prolonged Road Cycling Race
  451. Validity and Reliability of the Polar® S710 Mobile Cycling Powermeter
  452. Energy cost of different skating techniques in cross-country skiing
  453. Physiological characteristics of elite short- and long-distance triathletes
  454. Does the Mechanical Work in Running Change during the &OV0312;O2 Slow Component?
  455. Effects of Salbutamol and Caffeine Ingestion on Exercise Metabolism and Performance
  456. Effet d’une épreuve cycliste de 140 km sur la puissance maximale anaérobie
  457. Effects of concurrent endurance and strength training on running economy and &OV0312;O2 kinetics
  458. Facteurs mécaniques du coût énergétique dans trois locomotions humaines
  459. Coordination in Front Crawl in Elite Triathletes and Elite Swimmers
  460. Modelling the Transfers of Training Effects on Performance in Elite Triathletes
  461. Effect of two drafting modalities in cycling on running performance
  462. Physiological and biomechanical adaptations to the cycle to run transition in Olympic triathlon: review and practical recommendations for training
  463. Alterations in Running Economy and Mechanics After Maximal Cycling in Triathletes: Influence of Performance Level
  464. Performance and drag during drafting swimming in highly trained triathletes
  465. Effects of Wetsuit Use in Swimming Events