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Hypohydration Reduces Vertical Ground Reaction Impulse But Not Jump Height

Authors :
ARMY RESEARCH INST OF ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE NATICK MA THERMAL AND MOUNTAIN MEDICINE DIVISION
Cheuvront, Samuel N.
Kenefick, Robert W.
Ely, Brett R.
Harman, Everett A.
Catellani, John W.
Frykman, Peter N.
Nindl, Bradley C.
Sawka, Michael N.
ARMY RESEARCH INST OF ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE NATICK MA THERMAL AND MOUNTAIN MEDICINE DIVISION
Cheuvront, Samuel N.
Kenefick, Robert W.
Ely, Brett R.
Harman, Everett A.
Catellani, John W.
Frykman, Peter N.
Nindl, Bradley C.
Sawka, Michael N.
Source :
DTIC
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

This study examined vertical jump performance using a force platform and weighted vest to determine why hypohydration (~4% body mass) does not improve jump height. Jump height and other measures of functional performance from a force platform were determined for 15 healthy and active males when euhydrated (EUH), hypohydrated (HYP) and hypohydrated while wearing a weighted vest (HYPv) adjusted to precisely match water mass losses. HYP produced a significant loss of body mass [- 3.2 +/- 0.5 kg (- 3.8 +/- 0.6%); P<0.05], but body mass in HYPv was not different from EUH. There were no differences in absolute or relative peak force or power among trials. Jump height was not different between EUH (0.380 +/- 0.048 m) and HYP (0.384 +/- 0.050 m), but was 4% lower (P<0.05) in HYPv (0.365 +/- 0.52 m) than EUH due to a lower jump velocity between HYPv and EUH only (P<0.05). However, vertical ground reaction impulse (VGRI) was reduced in both HYP and HYPv (2-3%) compared with EUH (P<0.05). This study demonstrates that the failure to improve jump height when hypohydrated can be explained by offsetting reductions in both VGRI and body mass.<br />Published in the European Journal of Applied Physiology 2010.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
DTIC
Notes :
text/html, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn832088177
Document Type :
Electronic Resource