Abstract Eight male endurance runners [mean (SD): age 25 (6) years; height 1.79(0.06)m; body mass 70.5(6.0)kg; % body fat 12.5 (3.2); maximal oxygen consumption (VO2max 62.9(1.7)mlkg1min1] performed an interval training session, preceded immediately by test 1, followed after 1h by test 2, and after 72h by test 3. The training session was six 800-m intervals at 1kmh1 below the velocity achieved at VO2max with 3min of recovery between each interval. Tests 1, 2 and 3 were identical, and included collection of expired gas, measurement of ventilatory frequency (fv), heart rate (fc), rate of perceived exertion (RPE), and blood lactate concentration ([La]B) during the final 5min of 15min of running at 50% of the velocity achieved at VO2max (50% VO2max).Oxygen uptake (VO2), ventilation (VE), and respiratory exchange ratio (R) were subsequently determined from duplicate expired gas collections. Body mass and plasma volume changes were measured preceding and immediately following the training session, and before tests 13. Subjects ingested water immediately following the training session, the volume of which was determined from the loss of body mass during the session. Repeated measures analysis of variance with multiple comparison (Tukey) was used to test differences between results. No significant differences in body mass or plasma volume existed between the three test stages, indicating that the differences recorded for the measured parameters could not be attributed to changes in body mass or plasma volume between tests, and that rehydration after the interval training session was successful. A significant (P0.05) increase was found from test 1 to test 2 [mean (SD)] for VO2 [2.128(0.147) to 2.200(0.140)1min1], fc [125 (17) to 132(16)beats min1], and RPE [9 (2) to 11 (2)]. A significant (P0.05) decrease was found for submaximal R [0.89 (0.03) to 0.85 (0.04)]. These results suggest that alterations in VO2 during moderate-intensity, constant-velocity running do occur following heavy-intensity endurance running training, and that this is due to factors in addition to changed substrate metabolism towards greater fat utilisation, which could explain only 31% of the increase in VO2.