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VO2 max represents the maximum oxygen uptake during intense exercise, reflecting the integrated capacity of cardiovascular, respiratory, and muscular systems. It's vital for athletes as it dictates performance limits and indicates cardiorespiratory fitness. Higher VO2 max is linked to reduced mortality and lower risks of chronic diseases.
Elite athletes often engage in extensive training, with an 80-20 split between moderate and high-intensity sessions. However, for individuals seeking health benefits without athlete-level commitments, even shorter, high-intensity sessions can lead to significant fitness improvements, emphasizing the importance of moving out of the low fitness range. In this clip, Dr. Martin Gibala explains VO2 max's role in health and how non-athletes can optimize workouts to boost their cardiorespiratory fitness.
Rhonda: Can you talk about what VO2max is? We hear a lot about it and why it's important for health, longevity, and maybe why athletes would be interested in it as well.
Dr. Gibala: Sure. So VO2max is the maximum rate of oxygen uptake by the body. It's typically measured during an incremental exercise test. So you get up to very high work rates and that's where you'll see your highest rate of oxygen uptake. It's determined by many physiological factors and processes, but it reflects the peak integrated capacity of the cardiovascular, the respiratory, the blood, the skeletal muscle system to take up and utilize oxygen.
It's clearly important for athletes. It sort of sets the ceiling. You know, and a challenge for athletes in many events is how close to the ceiling can you work for a defined period of time? And so, you know, the higher the oxygen uptake, the better. It's also the clinical correlate of VO2max is cardiorespiratory fitness.
So VO2max is the best objective measure of cardiorespiratory fitness and why fitness is so important. Epidemiological studies show having a higher cardiorespiratory fitness is associated with a reduction in all-cause mortality, dying from all causes, as well as developing many different chronic diseases, cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes.
So bottom line is having a higher fitness is better. It protects you. It reduces your risk of dying and developing diseases. And the best way to measure that is through a VO2max test.
Rhonda: So you mentioned these epidemiological studies, these observational studies that are looking at the correlation between higher VO2max and, let's say, all-cause mortality.
There's a really, I think, important paper that was published in JAMA in 2018 that showed there was an inverse relationship between VO2max and all-cause mortality with no apparent upper limit. And the elite performing athletes or the elite performers had a 80% reduction in all-cause mortality compared to the lowest performers with their VO2max.
So my question for you is, do you think someone who is doing, let's say, you know, again, doing the high-intensity interval training mostly and 20, 25 minutes, three or four times a week, do you think they can be one of those elite? Is that like what you would think would be an elite performer in terms of their VO2max?
Or do you have to be an athlete? How can someone... Do we need to do extra, you know, types of training on top of the HIIT to really get to that level, that 80%?
Dr. Gibala: And so there's lots of things there. And I think, to be clear, the way that an individual may choose to engage in physical activity or exercise for their general health is completely different from the way that an elite endurance athlete might train.
And that has to do with lots of things, including what's the total volume of training. So if you're a serious or an elite or very high-level endurance athlete, you're engaged in 15, 20 sessions of training per week. You're training 25, 30 hours a week of training. And the best evidence, you know, gleaned...there's some scientific evidence, largely, you know, opinion from high-level coaches and athletes is about an 80-20 split there is sort of the ideal mix or ratio to optimize endurance performance.
So about 80% low to moderate intensity type training and 20% high intensity training, much of it including interval training. Again, that's the way that an elite athlete might train who's putting in 25, 30 hours a week. I think that ratio can change if we're talking about someone who's engaging in one to two or three to four hours a week of physical activity, and they're looking to optimize how to structure that type of training, fit within their regular lives.
And I think there that ratio can change fairly substantially. And you can incorporate...I would submit that engaging in more vigorous intensity type exercise if you're only doing one, two, three hours a week may potentiate or give you a further boost in fitness.
Rhonda: So even potentially one hour, one and a half hours a week, because that's also something...I mean, you mentioned the 80-20 split, and that's something I've heard about a lot, and I think about it because I am not an athlete.
I am, you know, far from an athlete. I am a committed, you know, exerciser, I guess you would call it. I mean, and I am also very interested in longevity and improving my VO2 max. And I wanna talk about measuring that in a minute. So it's, you know, it's not like finding if...you know, is there a minimum effective dose where we can get 80% of the, you know, improvements in VO2 max that an athlete would get?
I mean, that, you know, because if I can get like 80%, you know, I'm in. Like that's a good amount because there's just...there's no way I will be an athlete. Like that's not my life. I can't do that, you know? But I wanna get those improvements in VO2 max.
Dr. Gibala: Correct. No, and, you know, I would consider myself very similar. I'm a committed exerciser. You know, it's in my calendar, I'm sure, much like yours is, and I'm trying to...but, you know, you're busy trying to think what's the best way to structure that. But you know, so a couple of things. I think whatever reason you're active or exercising for, what's the goal? Is it performance?
Is it general health? Is it trying to optimize that time? And I think for a lot of people, it does seem to be, this is how much time I have. You know, maybe it's one hour a week, maybe it's two hours a week. What's the best way that I can utilize that time to promote my overall health? And for those individuals, again, I would submit that there is good evidence that engaging in more vigorous intensity exercise may potentiate the gains.
That's not to say it's the prescription for everyone. And the other thing I think we need to remember about VO2 max is the greatest gains are with the smaller changes in fitness, right? So we look at, you know, people who have low, moderate, and high physical activity levels, or low, moderate, and high VO2 max levels, the greatest bang for your buck is just getting out of that low range, right?
And then you continue to gain benefits, but you get diminishing returns. And the extreme would be the elite athlete who's pretty much doing everything right to maximize their physiology, and now they're really just playing on that upper margin. You know, what can I possibly do to eke out a little bit more gain?
That way of thinking and training is not necessarily the way that average everyday people, even serious committed exercisers who are primarily interested in health need to think.
Rhonda: Right. Like Stu, I like Stu's analogy of like squeezing the wet towel and like cutting the last drops out. You know, that's something that, you know, maybe if I was more of an elite athlete that I would be interested in doing. But right now, I'm like, how can I get to that, you know, where I'm at least 80% of getting that VO2 max? Maybe getting all of it if I could, like going hard and getting it.
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