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172 - Stephen Seiler - Sports Scientist - Polarised Training

The Physical Performance Show

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The Effects of Low Intensity Training on Blood Lactate Concentration

If you're at low intensity and blood lactate is basically not changing, it's staying low, then you can be pretty darn sure that that's also the case for the stress hormones. And if we could measure adrenaline or epinephrine is the other term for it, measure cortisol responses, either stress hormones, we would see that these stress hormones will track very nicely with blood lactate concentration. The body kind of goes into this state where it's less sensitive to the mobilizing stress response. It does you don't get the same response. Well, that's not a good place to be if you're an elite athlete.

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