Biophysical impact of five-weeks training cessation on sprint swimming performance
Metadatos
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Ruiz Navarro, Jesús Juan; Gay Párraga, Ana; Zacca, Rodrigo; Cuenca Fernández, Francisco; López Belmonte, Óscar; Morales Ortiz, Esther; López Contreras, GraciaMateria
exercise physiology oxygen uptake kinetics energetic, biomechanics, detraining
Fecha
2022-07-21Referencia bibliográfica
Ruiz-Navarro, J. J., Gay, A., Zacca, R., Cuenca-Fernández, F., López-Belmonte, Ó., Lopez-Contreras, G., ... & Arellano, R. (2022). Biophysical impact of 5-week training cessation on sprint swimming performance. International journal of sports physiology and performance, 17(10), 1463-1472.
Patrocinador
This study was supported by the Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (Spanish Agency of Research) and the European Regional Development Fund; PGC2018- 102116-B-I00 “SWIM II: Specific Water Innovative Measurements: Applied to the performance improvement” and the Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport: FPU17/02761 and FPU19/02477 grants. This article is a part of an international thesis belonging to the PhD Program of Biomedicine (B11.56.1) from the University of Granada, Granada (Spain). Rodrigo Zacca is founded by Research Center in Physical Activity, Health and Leisure—CIAFEL—Faculty of Sports, University of Porto— FADEUP (FCT UID/DTP/00617/2020) and Laboratory for Integrative and Translational Research in Population Health, Porto, Portugal (LA/P/0064/ 2020). Ruiz-Navarro and Gay contributed equally to this manuscript.Resumen
Purpose: To assess changes in swimming performance, anthropometrics, kinematics, energetics, and strength after 5-week training cessation. Methods: Twenty-one trained and highly trained swimmers (13 males: 17.4 [3.1] y; 50-m front crawl 463 [77] FINA points; 8 females: 16.7 [1.7] y; 50-m front crawl 535 [48] FINA points) performed a 50-m front-crawl all-out swim test, dryland and pool-based strength tests, and 10-, 15-, 20-, and 25-m front-crawl all-out efforts for anaerobic critical velocity assessment before and after a 5-week training cessation. Heart rate and oxygen uptake ( ˙VO2) were continuously measured before and after the 50-m swim test (off-kinetics). Results: Performance was impaired 1.9% (0.54 s) for males (P = .007, d = 0.91) and 2.9% (0.89 s) for females (P = .033, d = 0.93). Neither the anthropometrical changes (males: r2 = .516, P = .077; females: r2 = .096, P = .930) nor the physical activities that each participant performed during the off-season (males: r2 = .060, P = .900; females: r2 = .250, P = .734) attenuated performance impairments. Stroke rate and clean swimming speed decreased (P < .05), despite similar stroke length and stroke index (P > .05). Blood lactate concentrations remained similar (P > .05), but
VO˙ 2 peak
decreased in females (P = .04, d = 0.85). Both sexes showed higher heart rate before and after the 50-m swim test after 5 weeks (P < .05). Anaerobic metabolic power deterioration was only observed in males (P = .035, d = 0.65). Lower in-water force during tethered swimming at zero speed was observed in males (P = .033, d = 0.69). Regarding dryland strength, lower-body impairments were observed for males, while females showed upper-body impairments (P < .05). Conclusions: A 5-week training cessation yielded higher heart rate in the 50-m front crawl, anaerobic pathways, and dryland strength impairments. Coaches should find alternatives to minimize detraining effects during the off-season.





