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| My respiratory muscle trainer |
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| I do not run with mine, just sit and breathe with it |
VIH involves breathing at high volumes and rates so it is similar to intense exercise while maintaining carbon dioxide at stable levels to avoid dizziness. It is primarily done using specialized devices like the Breathe Way Better device which allows you to rebreathe exhaled carbon dioxide from a bag. This creates a close loop to keep blood gas levels balanced when allowing you to strengthen your inspiratory muscles.
IPTL strengthens the breathing muscles using a device with a calibrated, spring-loaded valve like the Power Lung or the Power Breathe that requires a consistent force to open. Users breathe in forcefully through the mouth against this resistance. It creates a "threshold" that must be overcomed to be able to breathe in. That was the device that I brought along.
Where did I get this idea from? Thanks to Kowalski and colleagues (2023) who investigated 16 well trained triathletes (7 females, 9 males) for 6 weeks using the VIH or IPTL program with progressive overload.
Both subjective and physiological responses were monitored across sessions. Blood markers, muscle oxygenation and cardiac indices were all measured before, during and after the training sessions to track adaptation and load.
The results show that both VIH and IPTL training increased physiological load. Blood gas analysis showed larger post respiratory muscle training differences in females compared to males. VIH induced smaller changes in blood gasometry compared to IPTL.
VIH produced higher subjective training load and perceived exertion compared to IPTL. IPTL caused greater metabolic stress, altering acid-base balance, elevated lactate and caused dizziness and headache.
The authors concluded that respiratory muscle training added measurable mental and physiological load in well trained triathletes. Usage of such training should be individualized depending on method and training context since this study suggests that the load (30 breaths twice a day) is significant enough to add to training load.
Even though the protocol is short and easy to fit into a training regime, my suggestion is to take it slow and use lower loads and progression to complement your regular training.
Did it help my following Saturday ride after my Easter trip? I think it did. I fared better than I expected.
References
Kowalski T, Kasiak PS, Rebis K et al (2023). Respiratory Muscle Training Induces Additional Stress And Training Load In Well-Trained Triathletes - Randomized Controlled Trial. Frontiers in Physiology. 14: 1264265. DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2023.1264265


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