Mental Fatigue and Physical and Cognitive Performance During a 2-Bout Exercise Test.

Autor: Vrijkotte, Susan, Meeusen, Romain, Vandervaeren, Cloe, Buyse, Luk, Cutsem, Jeroen van, Pattyn, Nathalie, Roelands, Bart
Předmět:
Zdroj: International Journal of Sports Physiology & Performance; Apr2018, Vol. 13 Issue 4, p510-516, 7p, 1 Diagram, 4 Charts, 2 Graphs
Abstrakt: Purpose: The 2-bout exercise protocol has been developed to diagnose nonfunctional overreaching and the "overtraining syndrome." It consists of 2 maximal exercise bouts separated by 4 hours. Mental fatigue negatively influences performance, but the effects of its occurrence during the 2-bout exercise protocol have never been investigated. The aim of this study was to examine whether mental fatigue (induced during the rest period) influences physical and cognitive performance during/after the second exercise bout of the 2-bout exercise protocol. Methods: Nine healthy, well-trained male cyclists participated in a singleblind, randomized, placebo-controlled crossover study. The intervention consisted of either 1.5-hour rest (control) or performing a computer-based Stroop task to induce mental fatigue. Cognitive (Eriksen Flanker task), physiological (lactate, maximum heart rate, and maximum wattage), and subjective data (mental fatigue-visual analog scale, Profile of Mood States, and rating of perceived exertion) were gathered. Results: Ratings of fatigue, tension, and mental fatigue were affected in the mental fatigue condition (P < .05). Neither physiological nor cognitive differences were found between conditions. Ratings of mental fatigue were already affected after the first maximum exercise test (P < .05). Conclusions: Neither physical nor cognitive performance was affected by mental fatigue, but subjective ratings did reveal significant differences. It is recommended to exclude mentally challenging tasks during the 2-bout exercise protocol rest period to ascertain unaffected subjective test results. This study should be repeated in athletes diagnosed with nonfunctional overreaching/overtraining syndrome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index