1. The Muscle Typology of Elite and World-Class Swimmers.
- Author
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Bellinger, Phillip, Lievens, Eline, Kennedy, Ben, Rice, Hal, Derave, Wim, and Minahan, Clare
- Subjects
MUSCLE analysis ,SKELETAL muscle ,PROTON magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,CALF muscles ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,SWIMMING ,ATHLETIC ability ,SPORTS events ,SPRINTING ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Purpose: To examine whether the muscle typology of elite and world-class swimmers could discriminate between their best distance event, swimming stroke style, or performance level. Methodology: The muscle carnosine content of 43 male (860 [76] FINA [Fédération Internationale de Natation] points) and 30 female (881 [63] FINA points) swimmers was measured in the soleus and gastrocnemius by proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy and expressed as a carnosine aggregate Z score (CAZ score) to estimate muscle typology. A higher CAZ score is associated with a higher estimated proportion of type II fibers. Swimmers were categorized by their best stroke, distance category (sprinters, 50–100 m; middle distance, 200–400 m; or long distance, 800 m–open water), and performance level (world-class, world top 10, or elite and world top 100 swimmers outside of the world top 10). Results: There was no significant difference in the CAZ score of sprint- (−0.08 [0.55]), middle- (−0.17 [0.70]), or long-distance swimmers (−0.30 [0.75], P =.693). World-class sprint swimmers (all strokes included) had a significantly higher CAZ score (0.37 [0.70]) when compared to elite sprint swimmers (−0.25 [0.61], P =.024, d = 0.94). Breaststroke swimmers (0.69 [0.73]) had a significantly higher CAZ score compared to freestyle (−0.24 [0.54], P <.001, d = 1.46), backstroke (−0.16 [0.47], P =.006, d = 1.42), and butterfly swimmers (−0.39 [0.53], P <.001, d = 1.70). Furthermore, within the cohort of breaststroke swimmers, there was a significant positive correlation between FINA points and CAZ score (r =.728, P =.011); however, this association was not evident in other strokes. Conclusion: While there was no clear association between muscle typology and event distance specialization, world-class sprint swimmers possess a greater estimated proportion of type II fibers compared to elite sprint swimmers, as well as breaststroke swimmers compared to freestyle, backstroke, and butterfly swimmers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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