The Acute Demands of Repeated-Sprint Training on Physiological, Neuromuscular, Perceptual and Performance Outcomes in Team Sport Athletes: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.
Autor: | Thurlow, Fraser, Weakley, Jonathon, Townshend, Andrew D., Timmins, Ryan G., Morrison, Matthew, McLaren, Shaun J. |
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ONLINE information services
TEAM sports META-analysis CONFIDENCE intervals SYSTEMATIC reviews LONG-distance running OXYGEN consumption PHYSICAL training & conditioning SPORTS COOLDOWN PATIENT monitoring DESCRIPTIVE statistics RESEARCH funding REPEATED measures design HEART rate monitoring LACTATES EXERCISE ATHLETIC ability MEDLINE INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems MAXIMUM likelihood statistics DATA analysis software SPRINTING |
Zdroj: | Sports Medicine; Aug2023, Vol. 53 Issue 8, p1609-1640, 32p |
Abstrakt: | Background: Repeated-sprint training (RST) involves maximal-effort, short-duration sprints (≤ 10 s) interspersed with brief recovery periods (≤ 60 s). Knowledge about the acute demands of RST and the influence of programming variables has implications for training prescription. Objectives: To investigate the physiological, neuromuscular, perceptual and performance demands of RST, while also examining the moderating effects of programming variables (sprint modality, number of repetitions per set, sprint repetition distance, inter-repetition rest modality and inter-repetition rest duration) on these outcomes. Methods: The databases Pubmed, SPORTDiscus, MEDLINE and Scopus were searched for original research articles investigating overground running RST in team sport athletes ≥ 16 years. Eligible data were analysed using multi-level mixed effects meta-analysis, with meta-regression performed on outcomes with ~ 50 samples (10 per moderator) to examine the influence of programming factors. Effects were evaluated based on coverage of their confidence (compatibility) limits (CL) against elected thresholds of practical importance. Results: From 908 data samples nested within 176 studies eligible for meta-analysis, the pooled effects (± 90% CL) of RST were as follows: average heart rate (HR |
Databáze: | Complementary Index |
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