The effects of custom‐made mouthguard design on physiological parameters and players' perception in rugby union.
Autor: | Karaganeva, Raya, Tomlinson, David J., Pinner, Susan, Taylor, Rebecca L., Burden, Adrian, Winwood, Keith |
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Předmět: |
RUGBY football
PSYCHOLOGY of athletes CARDIOPULMONARY system physiology RESEARCH funding PRODUCT design KRUSKAL-Wallis Test MOUTH protectors AEROBIC capacity DESCRIPTIVE statistics ANALYSIS of variance HUMAN comfort ATHLETIC ability OXYGEN consumption DATA analysis software BREATH tests EQUIPMENT & supplies |
Zdroj: | European Journal of Sport Science; Apr2024, Vol. 24 Issue 4, p499-507, 9p |
Abstrakt: | Some sports participants are often reluctant to wear a mouthguard due to issues with comfort, breathing and communication. However, there is limited evidence that investigates the use of custom‐made mouthguards and variations in design as key factors to minimise these issues. Therefore, the aim of this study was to examine the effect of custom‐made mouthguard design on cardiopulmonary function, exercise performance and perception of comfort in rugby union players. Fourteen rugby players (aged 20.2 ± 1.19 years) were recruited to undertake a rugby‐specific exercise protocol on a treadmill over four conditions (no mouthguard and three custom‐made mouthguard designs). Cardiopulmonary responses were assessed using breath‐by‐breath analysis, in conjunction with blood lactate (BLa) and rating of perceived exertion (RPE). Maximum oxygen uptake (VO2max) was assessed before and after the study to identify any changes in players' level of performance. Participants scored each mouthguard in relation to preference, comfort, breathing, protection and retention. There were no differences in oxygen uptake (p = 0.785, ηp2 ${\eta }_{p}^{2}$ = 0.021), ventilation (p = 0.952, ηp2 ${\eta }_{p}^{2}$ = 0.007), respiratory exchange ratio (p = 0.564, ηp2 ${\eta }_{p}^{2}$ = 0.039) and heart rate (p = 0.830, ηp2 ${\eta }_{p}^{2}$ = 0.017), whilst participants performed with the selected custom‐made mouthguards. However, RPE was higher without a mouthguard than whilst using two of the mouthguards during the first 3 min of exercise, in combination with higher BLa accumulation (p ≤ 0.05). Although there was no statistical difference between mouthguard designs in the ratings around comfort, there was a preference towards mouthguards with reduced palatal coverage. Individual preference in design may improve compliance of wearing a mouthguard without affecting physiological parameters. Highlights: Wearing any of the three selected custom‐made mouthguards had no impact on cardiorespiratory parameters, such as oxygen uptake, minute ventilation, respiratory exchange ratio, heart rate and blood lactate.In terms of participants' perceived comfort, there were no differences between the selected mouthguard designs.The findings of the present study may lead to encouraging the use of custom‐made mouthguards amongst rugby players as no negative influence on the examined physiological parameters was found. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
Databáze: | Complementary Index |
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