Anaerobic threshold as a basic criterion of training recommendation can be estimated
by various parameters. The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship
and the reproducibility of ventilatory, lactate-derived aind catecholamine thresholds
of an incremental treadmill exercise. Therefore, 11 male subjects underwent two incremental
treadmill tests within 7 days. The lactate threshold (LT) was determined at the lowest
value of the lactate-equivalent (ratio lactate/performance). The individual anaerobic
threshold (IAT) was calculated at LT+1.5mmol/L lactate. The ventilatory thresholds,
using mass-spectrometry, were defined by the V-slope method (AT) and at the deflection
point of end-tidal CO2 (ET-CO2) concentration (RCP). The thresholds of epinephrine (TE) and norepinephrine (TNE)
were calculated in the manner of LT. The running velocities were highly reproducible
at LT (test-retest correlation coefficient r = 0.90), IAT (r = 0.97), AT (r = 0.8:8)
and RCP (r = 0.95). By contrast TE (r = 0.49) and TNE (r = 0.46) showed a poor reproducibility.
TE and TNE occurred 5-11 % below LTand AT with a low correlation to LTand AT. LT was
found AX below AT, both were correlated with r = 0.70 (p < 0.01, test 1) and r = 0.95
(p<0.01, test 2). IAT occurred 7-8 % above RCP, in both tests a close correlation
was found between IAT and RCP of r = 0.97 (p<0.01). In summary, the ventilatory and
lacctate-derived thresholds show a high and similar reproducibiility, but the catecholamine
threshold does not. In the present exercise protocol, there are systematic differences
between the lactate-derived and ventilatory thresholds, in spite of a close- relationship,
and these must be taken into account in recommendations derived for training.
Key words
Reproducibility - lactate threshold - ventilatory threshold - catecholamine threshold
- treadmill test