1. Estimating Muscle Fiber-Type Composition in Elite Athletes: A Survey on Current Practices and Perceived Merit.
- Author
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Lievens, Eline, Van de Casteele, Freek, De Block, Fien, Van Vossel, Kim, Vandenbogaerde, Tom, Sandford, Gareth N., Bellinger, Phillip, Minahan, Clare, Bourgois, Jan G., Stellingwerff, Trent, Mujika, Iñigo, and Derave, Wim
- Subjects
MUSCLE physiology ,BIOPSY ,SPORTS ,RESEARCH funding ,ELITE athletes ,SENSORY perception ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,CHI-squared test ,SURVEYS ,ATHLETIC ability ,EXERCISE tests ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
Purpose: To gather information on practices and perceptions of high-performance experts regarding their athletes' muscle fiber-type composition (MFTC) and its estimation. Methods: A questionnaire on the noninvasive versus invasive estimation of MFTC was completed by 446 experts including coaches and sport-science/sports-medicine staff. Moreover, the perceived importance of MFTC for training and performance optimization was assessed. Differences between sport types (individual and team sports) were analyzed using chi-square tests. Results: Forty percent of the experts implemented MFTC assessment in pursuit of performance optimization, while 50% did not know their athletes' MFTC but expressed a desire to implement it if they would be able to assess MFTC. Ten percent did not perceive value in MFTC assessment. Only 18% of experts believed that their athletes would undergo a muscle biopsy, leading to the adoption of alternative noninvasive techniques. Experts primarily relied on their experience to estimate MFTC (65%), with experts working in individual sports using their experience more frequently than those working in team sports (68% vs 51%; P =.009). Jump tests emerged as the second-most commonly employed method for estimating MFTC (56%). When only considering experts who are currently using MFTC, 87% use MFTC to individualize training volume and 84% to individualize training intensity. Conclusions: Experts value MFTC assessment primarily to individualize training but mainly rely on noninvasive methods to estimate MFTC. Some of these methods lack scientific validity, suggesting a continuing need for education and further research in this area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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