Comparative Lactate Kinetics After Short and Prolonged Submaximal Exercise

Abstract
Arterial blood lactate concentrations were determined in two groups of eleven males before, during and after near 2 W.kg body mass-1 bicycle exercise. One group of subjects cycled for 3 min, whereas the second group exercised for 60 min. All the lactate curves during recovery could be fitted to a bi-exponential time function consisting of a rapidly increasing and a slowly decreasing component. This typical evolution pattern indicates that the two-compartment model which has been proposed to represent the movements of lactate after short exercise applies also to recovery from prolonged exercise. Lengthening exercise duration decreased (respectively 10% and 28%) the value of both velocity constants of the fits to the lactate recovery curves, with the difference (28%) being statistically significant for the velocity constant describing the slowly decreasing part of the curves. This result indicates that extending exercise from 3 to 60 min impairs the ability to remove lactate after the exercise.