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Biophysical Impact of 5-Week Training Cessation on Sprint Swimming Performance.

Authors :
Ruiz-Navarro JJ
Gay A
Zacca R
Cuenca-Fernández F
López-Belmonte Ó
López-Contreras G
Morales-Ortiz E
Arellano R
Source :
International journal of sports physiology and performance [Int J Sports Physiol Perform] 2022 Jul 21; Vol. 17 (10), pp. 1463-1472. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Jul 21 (Print Publication: 2022).
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Purpose: To assess changes in swimming performance, anthropometrics, kinematics, energetics, and strength after 5-week training cessation.<br />Methods: Twenty-one trained and highly trained swimmers (13 males: 17.4 [3.1] y; 50-m front crawl 463 [77] FINA points; 8 females: 16.7 [1.7] y; 50-m front crawl 535 [48] FINA points) performed a 50-m front-crawl all-out swim test, dryland and pool-based strength tests, and 10-, 15-, 20-, and 25-m front-crawl all-out efforts for anaerobic critical velocity assessment before and after a 5-week training cessation. Heart rate and oxygen uptake (V˙O2) were continuously measured before and after the 50-m swim test (off-kinetics).<br />Results: Performance was impaired 1.9% (0.54 s) for males (P = .007, d = 0.91) and 2.9% (0.89 s) for females (P = .033, d = 0.93). Neither the anthropometrical changes (males: r2 = .516, P = .077; females: r2 = .096, P = .930) nor the physical activities that each participant performed during the off-season (males: r2 = .060, P = .900; females: r2 = .250, P = .734) attenuated performance impairments. Stroke rate and clean swimming speed decreased (P < .05), despite similar stroke length and stroke index (P > .05). Blood lactate concentrations remained similar (P > .05), but V˙O2 peak decreased in females (P = .04, d = 0.85). Both sexes showed higher heart rate before and after the 50-m swim test after 5 weeks (P < .05). Anaerobic metabolic power deterioration was only observed in males (P = .035, d = 0.65). Lower in-water force during tethered swimming at zero speed was observed in males (P = .033, d = 0.69). Regarding dryland strength, lower-body impairments were observed for males, while females showed upper-body impairments (P < .05).<br />Conclusions: A 5-week training cessation yielded higher heart rate in the 50-m front crawl, anaerobic pathways, and dryland strength impairments. Coaches should find alternatives to minimize detraining effects during the off-season.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1555-0273
Volume :
17
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
International journal of sports physiology and performance
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35894894
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1123/ijspp.2022-0045