Effects of Long-Haul Transmeridian Travel on Subjective Jet-Lag and Self-Reported Sleep and Upper Respiratory Symptoms in Professional Rugby League Players.
Autor: | Fowler, Peter M., Duffield, Rob, Lu, Donna, Hickmans, Jeremy A., Scott, Tannath J. |
---|---|
Předmět: |
EXERCISE
HEALTH AIR travel ANTHROPOMETRY EXERCISE physiology JET lag MUSCLE strength MYALGIA PROBABILITY theory QUESTIONNAIRES RESPIRATORY infections RUGBY football SCALE analysis (Psychology) SLEEP SPORTS sciences STATISTICS STRETCH (Physiology) TIME TRAVEL hygiene DATA analysis STATISTICAL significance EFFECT sizes (Statistics) PROFESSIONAL athletes DATA analysis software DESCRIPTIVE statistics ONE-way analysis of variance SYMPTOMS |
Zdroj: | International Journal of Sports Physiology & Performance; Oct2016, Vol. 11 Issue 7, p876-884, 9p, 4 Charts, 2 Graphs |
Abstrakt: | Purpose: To examine the effects of 24-h travel west across 11 time zones on subjective jet-lag and wellness responses together with self-reported sleep and upper respiratory symptoms in 18 professional rugby league players. Methods: Measures were obtained 1 or 2 d before (pretravel) and 2, 6, and 8 d after travel (post-2, post-6, and post-8) from Australia to the United Kingdom (UK) for the 2015 World Club Series. Results: Compared with pretravel, subjective jet-lag remained significantly elevated on post-8 (3.1 ± 2.3, P < .05, d > 0.90), although it was greatest on post-2 (4.1 ± 1.4). Self-reported sleep-onset limes were significantly earlier on post-2 than at all other time points (P < .05, d > 0.90), and large effect sizes suggested that wake times were earlier on post-2 than on post-6 and post-8 (d > 0.90). Although significantly more upper respiratory symptoms were reported on post-6 than at pretravel (P < .05, d ☒ K 0.90), no incidence of injury and negligible changes in wellness and muscle strength and range of motion (P > .05, d < 0.90) were evident after travel. Conclusions: Results suggest that westward long-haul travel between Australia and the UK exacerbates subjective jet-lag and sleep responses, along with upper respiratory symptoms, in professional rugby league players. Of note, the increase in self-reported upper respiratory symptoms is a reminder that the demands of long-haul travel may be an additional concern in jet-lag for traveling athletes. However, due to the lack of sport-specific performance measures, it is still unclear whether international travel interferes with training to the extent that subsequent competition performance is impaired. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: | Complementary Index |
Externí odkaz: |