The effect of post-exercise hydrotherapy on subsequent exercise performance and heart rate variability

(Auswirkung von Hydrotherapie nach Belastung auf die darauf folgende Leistung bei Belastung und die Herzfrequenzvariabilität)

We investigated the effect of hydrotherapy on time-trial performance and cardiac parasympathetic reactivation during recovery from intense training. On three occasions, 18 well-trained cyclists completed 60 min high-intensity cycling, followed 20 min later by one of three 10-min recovery interventions: passive rest (PAS), cold water immersion (CWI), or contrast water immersion (CWT). The cyclists then rested quietly for 160 min with R-R intervals and perceptions of recovery recorded every 30 min. Cardiac parasympathetic activity was evaluated using the natural logarithm of the square root of mean squared differences of successive R-R intervals (ln rMSSD). Finally, the cyclists completed a work-based cycling time trial. Effects were examined using magnitude-based inferences. Differences in time-trial performance between the three trials were trivial. Compared with PAS, general fatigue was very likely lower for CWI (difference [90% confidence limits; -12% (-18; -5)]) and CWT [-11% (-19; -2)]. Leg soreness was almost certainly lower following CWI [-22% (-30; -14)] and CWT [-27% (-37; -15)]. The change in mean ln rMSSD following the recovery interventions (ln rMSSDPost-interv) was almost certainly higher following CWI [16.0% (10.4; 23.2)] and very likely higher following CWT [12.5% (5.5; 20.0)] compared with PAS, and possibly higher following CWI [3.7% (-0.9; 8.4)] compared with CWT. The correlations between performance, ln rMSSDPost-interv and perceptions of recovery were unclear. A moderate correlation was observed between ln rMSSDPost-interv and leg soreness [r = -0.50 (-0.66; -0.29)]. Although the effects of CWI and CWT on performance were trivial, the beneficial effects on perceptions of recovery support the use of these recovery strategies.
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Schlagworte: Physiotherapie Wiederherstellung Thermoregulation Relation Leistung Belastung Radsport Hydrotherapie
Notationen: Biowissenschaften und Sportmedizin Ausdauersportarten
Tagging: Kryotherapie
DOI: 10.1007/s00421-011-2052-7
Veröffentlicht in: European Journal of Applied Physiology
Veröffentlicht: 2012
Jahrgang: 112
Heft: 3
Seiten: 951-961
Dokumentenarten: Artikel
Sprache: Englisch
Level: hoch