Resumen:
The purpose of this study was to examine whether and how cycle time duration affects energy expenditure and substrate utilization during whole-body vibration (WBV). Nine men performed 3 squatting exercises in execution frequency cycles of 6, 4, and 2 seconds to 90º knee flexion with vibration (Vb+) (frequency was set at 30 Hz and the amplitude of vibration was 4 mm) and without vibration (Vb-) during 3 minutes, each with an additional load of 30% of the subject’s body weight. A 2-way analysis of variance for VO2 revealed a significant vibration condition main effect (p< 0.001) and a cycle time duration effect (p< 0.001). When differences were analyzed by Fisher’s LSD test, cycle time duration of 2 seconds was signifi- cantly different from 4 and 6 seconds, both in Vb+ and Vb-. Total energy expenditure (EEtot), carbohydrate oxidation rate (EEcho), and fat oxidation rate (EEfat) demonstrated a significant vibration condition main effect (EEtot: p <0.01; EEcho: p < 0.001; EEfat: p < 0.001) and cycle time duration main effect (EEtot and EEcho: p < 0.001; EEfat: p < 0.01). EEtot, EEcho, and EEfat post hoc comparisons indicated that values for the 2-second test significantly differed from 4 and 6 secon...