English Institute of Sport, Manchester, UK.
J Sports Sci. 2012;30(6):541-5. doi: 10.1080/02640414.2012.660188. Epub 2012 Feb 14.
Sleep is known to be an important component of recovery from training, yet little is known about the quality and quantity of sleep achieved by elite athletes. The aim of the present study was to quantify sleep in elite athletes using wristwatch actigraphy. Individual nights of sleep from a cohort of Olympic athletes (n = 47) from various sports were analysed and compared to non-athletic controls (n = 20). There were significant differences between athletes and controls in all measures apart from 'time asleep' (p = 0.27), suggesting poorer characteristics of sleep in the athlete group. There was a significant effect of gender on 'time awake' (mean difference: 12 minutes higher in males; 95% likely range: 3 to 21 minutes) and 'sleep efficiency' (mean difference: 2.4 lower in males; 95% likely range: 0.1 to 4.8). Athletes showed poorer markers of sleep quality than an age and sex matched non-athletic control group (Sleep efficiency: 80.6 ± 6.4% and 88.7 ± 3.6%, respectively. Fragmentation Index: 36.0 ± 12.4 and 29.8 ± 9.0, respectively) but remained within the range for healthy sleep. This descriptive study provides novel data for the purpose of characterising sleep in elite athletes.
睡眠被认为是训练恢复的重要组成部分,但对于精英运动员的睡眠质量和数量知之甚少。本研究的目的是使用腕戴活动记录仪来量化精英运动员的睡眠。对来自不同运动项目的奥林匹克运动员队列(n=47)的个别夜间睡眠进行了分析,并与非运动员对照组(n=20)进行了比较。除了“睡眠时间”(p=0.27)外,运动员和对照组在所有指标上均存在显著差异,这表明运动员组的睡眠特征较差。“清醒时间”(男性高 12 分钟;95%可能范围:3 至 21 分钟)和“睡眠效率”(男性低 2.4%;95%可能范围:0.1 至 4.8%)存在显著的性别效应。运动员的睡眠质量指标比年龄和性别匹配的非运动员对照组差(睡眠效率:分别为 80.6±6.4%和 88.7±3.6%。碎片化指数:分别为 36.0±12.4%和 29.8±9.0%),但仍在健康睡眠范围内。这项描述性研究为描述精英运动员的睡眠提供了新的数据。