Difference between revisions of "Intermittent Hypoxic Training"

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Being exposed to low oxygen for short periods has been shown to provide additional benefits beyond other altitude training approaches. The technique usually involves breathing air with reduced oxygen content for shorter periods IHT can provide the increase in red blood cell count as longer periods, as well as improving oxygen delivery to the muscles. IHT is normally performed at rest rather than when training, and uses a pulse oximeter to verify the impact of the hypoxia. IHT uses lower oxygen content than other forms of altitude training. For details of the science behind IHT, see [[Intermittent Hypoxic Training 101]]
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There are some advocates of exercising briefly in hypoxic (low oxygen) conditions. This approach seems to produce good adaptation to altitude, but compromises the quality of training dramatically. Note that [[Intermittent Hypoxic Exposure]] is sometimes called 'Intermittent Hypoxic Training', which causes confusion.
==Benefits of IHT==
 
* Improved efficiency in oxygen usage (mitochondrial respiration)
 
* Increased blood oxygen carrying capacity (not all studies show this)
 
* Greater resistance to free radicals through improved anti-oxidant defenses
 
* Adaption in breathing patterns at altitude
 
* A shift from protein to fat as an energy source
 
* No reduction in training intensity compared with Live High, Train High
 
* No impaired sleep compared with Live High, Train Low
 
 
 
 
==See Also==
 
==See Also==
* [[Altitude Training]]
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* [[The Science of Altitude Training]]
* [[Hypoxia Systems]]
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* [[Comparison of Altitude Training Systems]]
* [[Book Review Altitude Training and Athletic Performance]]
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* [[Book Review of Altitude Training and Athletic Performance]]
* [[Intermittent Hypoxic Training 101]]  
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* [[Intermittent Hypoxic Exposure]]  
 
* [[AltoLab]]
 
* [[AltoLab]]

Latest revision as of 12:00, 27 March 2013

There are some advocates of exercising briefly in hypoxic (low oxygen) conditions. This approach seems to produce good adaptation to altitude, but compromises the quality of training dramatically. Note that Intermittent Hypoxic Exposure is sometimes called 'Intermittent Hypoxic Training', which causes confusion.

See Also