
pmid: 19996788
handle: 11576/2676950 , 11576/2676993 , 11580/16597
This study aimed to 1) analyze the energy requirement (VO2eq) and the contribution of the aerobic (VO2ex), anaerobic alactic (VO2al), and anaerobic lactic (VO2la-) energy sources of a simulated intervention; 2) ascertain differences in mean VO2 and heart rate (HR) during firefighting tasks; and 3) verify the relationship between time of job completion and the fitness level of firefighters. Twenty Italian firefighters (age = 32 ± 6 yr, VO2peak = 43.1 ± 4.9 mL·kg·min) performed 4 consecutive tasks (i.e., child rescue; 250-m run; find an exit; 250-m run) that required a VO2eq of 406.26 ± 73.91 mL·kg (VO2ex = 86 ± 5%; VO2al = 9 ± 3%; VO2la- = 5 ± 3%). After 30 minutes, the recovery HR (108 ± 15 beats·min) and VO2 (8.86±2.67mL·kg·min) were higher (p < 0.0001) than basal values (HR = 66 ± 8 beats·min; VO2 = 4.57 ± 1.07 mL·kg·min), indicating that passive recovery is insufficient in reducing the cardiovascular and thermoregulatory strain of the previous workload. Differences (p < 0.001) between tasks emerged for mean VO2 and HR, with a lack of significant correlation between the time of job completion and the firefighters' aerobic fitness. These findings indicate that unpredictable working conditions highly challenge expert firefighters who need adequate fitness levels to meet the requirements of their work. Practically, to enhance the fitness level of firefighters, specific interval training programs should include a wide variety of tasks requiring different intensities and decision-making strategies.
Adult, Male, aerobic metabolism; anaerobic alactic metabolism; anaerobic lactic metabolism; job performance, Analysis of Variance, Anthropometry, Physical Exertion, Fires, Oxygen Consumption, Protective Clothing, Stress, Physiological, Task Performance and Analysis, Lactates, Humans, Energy Metabolism
Adult, Male, aerobic metabolism; anaerobic alactic metabolism; anaerobic lactic metabolism; job performance, Analysis of Variance, Anthropometry, Physical Exertion, Fires, Oxygen Consumption, Protective Clothing, Stress, Physiological, Task Performance and Analysis, Lactates, Humans, Energy Metabolism
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