vVO2max
vVO2max (velocity at maximal oxygen uptake) is an intense running or swimming pace. This is the minimum speed for which the organism's maximal oxygen uptake is reached (after a few minutes of exercise at this intensity); at higher paces, additional power is entirely delivered by anaerobic processes. At this pace, blood lactate in the muscles reaches levels around 8-10 mM.[citation needed]
The vVO2max of world class middle- and long-distance runners may exceed 24 km/h (14.9 mph or about 4:00/mile pace), making this speed slightly comparable to 3000 m race pace. For many athletes, vVO2max may be slightly slower than 1500 m or mile race pace.[citation needed]
Training
Research by Véronique Billat has shown that training at vVO2max pace improves both VO2max and the economy required to maintain pace at this intensity.[1][2]
Training at vVO2max takes the form of interval workouts. For example, 3 x 1000 m with 3 minutes recovery between each repetition.
Determining vV02max from VO2max
The formula from Léger and Mercier[3] links the VO2max to the vVO2max, supposing an ideal running technique.
- vVO2max = VO2max / 3.5
where vVO2max is in km/h and VO2max is in mL/(kg•min).
Note: This formula is identical to that used to calculate the Metabolic Equivalent of Task (MET) score for a given VO2max estimation.
See also
- Anaerobic exercise
- High-intensity interval training
- Lactate threshold
- Respirometry
- Running economy
- Training effect
- VO2max
- Metabolic equivalent
- VDOT
References
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