Centre for Sports and Exercise Medicine, William Harvey Research Institute, Bart's and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry, Queen Mary University of London, Mile End Hospital, Bancroft Road, London E1 4DG, UK.
BMC Med. 2012 Dec 18;10:166. doi: 10.1186/1741-7015-10-166.
Endurance exercise capacity diminishes under hot environmental conditions. Time to exhaustion can be increased by lowering body temperature prior to exercise (pre-cooling). This systematic literature review synthesizes the current findings of the effects of pre-cooling on endurance exercise performance, providing guidance for clinical practice and further research.
The MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Web of Science and SPORTDiscus databases were searched in May 2012 for studies evaluating the effectiveness of pre-cooling to enhance endurance exercise performance in hot environmental conditions (≥ 28°C). Studies involving participants with increased susceptibility to heat strain, cooling during or between bouts of exercise, and protocols where aerobic endurance was not the principle performance outcome were excluded. Potential publications were assessed by two independent reviewers for inclusion and quality. Means and standard deviations of exercise performance variables were extracted or sought from original authors to enable effect size calculations.
In all, 13 studies were identified. The majority of studies contained low participant numbers and/or absence of sample size calculations. Six studies used cold water immersion, four crushed ice ingestion and three cooling garments. The remaining study utilized mixed methods. Large heterogeneity in methodological design and exercise protocols was identified. Effect size calculations indicated moderate evidence that cold water immersion effectively improved endurance performance, and limited evidence that ice slurry ingestion improved performance. Cooling garments were ineffective. Most studies failed to document or report adverse events. Low participant numbers in each study limited the statistical power of certain reported trends and lack of blinding could potentially have introduced either participant or researcher bias in some studies.
Current evidence indicates cold water immersion may be the most effective method of pre-cooling to improve endurance performance in hot conditions, although practicality must be considered. Ice slurry ingestion appears to be the most promising practical alternative. Interestingly, cooling garments appear of limited efficacy, despite their frequent use. Mechanisms behind effective pre-cooling remain uncertain, and optimal protocols have yet to be established. Future research should focus on standardizing exercise performance protocols, recruiting larger participant numbers to enable direct comparisons of effectiveness and practicality for each method, and ensuring potential adverse events are evaluated.
在炎热的环境条件下,耐力运动能力会下降。通过在运动前降低体温(预冷)可以增加力竭时间。本系统文献综述综合了目前关于预冷对耐力运动表现影响的研究结果,为临床实践和进一步研究提供了指导。
2012 年 5 月,检索 MEDLINE、EMBASE、CINAHL、Web of Science 和 SPORTDiscus 数据库,评估在炎热环境条件(≥28°C)下预冷增强耐力运动表现的效果的研究。研究对象包括易受热应激影响、运动期间或运动之间冷却以及有氧运动耐力不是主要表现结果的研究被排除在外。两名独立评审员评估潜在出版物的纳入和质量。从原始作者那里提取或寻求运动表现变量的均值和标准差,以进行效应量计算。
共确定了 13 项研究。大多数研究参与者数量较少,或者没有样本量计算。6 项研究使用冷水浸泡,4 项研究使用冰沙摄入,3 项研究使用冷却服装。其余研究采用混合方法。研究设计和运动方案的方法学存在很大的异质性。效应量计算表明,冷水浸泡可有效提高耐力表现,证据有限,冰沙摄入可提高表现。冷却服装无效。大多数研究未能记录或报告不良事件。每项研究中的参与者人数较少,限制了某些报告趋势的统计效力,并且在某些研究中缺乏盲法可能会引入参与者或研究人员的偏倚。
目前的证据表明,冷水浸泡可能是提高热条件下耐力表现的最有效预冷方法,尽管实用性必须考虑在内。冰沙摄入似乎是最有前途的实用替代方法。有趣的是,尽管冷却服装经常使用,但效果有限。有效预冷的机制仍不确定,最佳方案尚未确定。未来的研究应集中于标准化运动表现方案,招募更多的参与者,以比较每种方法的有效性和实用性,并确保评估潜在的不良事件。