Rubin Robert T, Lin Sonia, Curtis Amy, Auerbach Daniel, Win Charlene
Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, USA ; UCLA Bruin Masters Swim Club, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Saint Louis University School of Medicine, Saint Louis, MO, USA.
Open Access J Sports Med. 2013 Mar 12;4:63-70. doi: 10.2147/OAJSM.S37718. eCollection 2013.
Because of its many participants and thorough records, competitive Masters swimming offers a rich data source for determining the rate of physical decline associated with aging in physically fit individuals. The decline in performance among national champion swimmers, both men and women and in short and long swims, is linear, at about 0.6% per year up to age 70-75, after which it accelerates in quadratic fashion. These conclusions are based primarily on cross-sectional studies, and little is known about individual performance declines with aging. Herein we present performance profiles of 19 male and 26 female national and international champion Masters swimmers, ages 25 to 96 years, participating in competitions for an average of 23 years.
Swimmers' longitudinal data were compared with the fastest times of world record holders across ages 35-100 years by two regression methods. Neither method proved to accurately model this data set: compared with the rates of decline estimated from the world record data, which represent the best recorded times at given ages, there was bias toward shallower rates of performance decline in the longitudinal data, likely owing to a practice effect in some swimmers as they began their Masters programs. In swimmers' later years, once maximum performance had been achieved, individual profiles followed the decline represented in the world records, and a few swimmers became the world record holders. In some instances, the individual profiles indicated performance better than the world record data; these swimmers achieved their times after the world record data were collected in 2005-2006.
Declining physiological functional capacity occurs with advancing age, and this is reflected in the performance decrements of aging Masters swimmers. Individual swimmers show different performance trajectories with aging, declines being mitigated by practice, which improves both physiological capacity and swimming technique, particularly in the early years of participation. The longitudinal data of this study indicate that individuals can participate in high-intensity swimming over several decades, competitively improving over those decades until, in some instances, they become world record holders for their age groups.
由于有众多参与者和详尽记录,竞技性的成人游泳大师赛为确定身体健康个体与衰老相关的身体机能衰退速率提供了丰富的数据源。国家冠军游泳运动员,无论男女,在短距离和长距离游泳项目中的成绩下降呈线性,在70 - 75岁之前每年约下降0.6%,之后呈二次函数加速下降。这些结论主要基于横断面研究,关于个体成绩随年龄下降的情况知之甚少。在此,我们展示了19名男性和26名女性国家及国际冠军成人游泳大师赛选手的成绩概况,他们年龄在25至96岁之间,平均参赛23年。
通过两种回归方法,将游泳运动员的纵向数据与35至100岁各年龄段世界纪录保持者的最快成绩进行比较。两种方法均未被证明能准确模拟此数据集:与从世界纪录数据估算出的下降速率相比(这些数据代表了特定年龄下的最佳记录成绩),纵向数据中成绩下降速率存在偏差,偏向于较平缓的下降速率,这可能是因为一些游泳运动员在开始成人游泳项目时有训练效应。在游泳运动员生涯后期,一旦达到最佳成绩,个体成绩概况便遵循世界纪录中显示的下降趋势,并且有少数游泳运动员成为了世界纪录保持者。在某些情况下,个体成绩概况显示其表现优于世界纪录数据;这些游泳运动员是在2005 - 2006年收集世界纪录数据之后取得他们的成绩的。
随着年龄增长,生理功能能力会下降,这在老年成人游泳大师赛选手的成绩下降中有所体现。个体游泳运动员随着年龄增长表现出不同的成绩轨迹,训练可减轻成绩下降,训练能改善生理能力和游泳技术,尤其是在参赛的早期阶段。本研究的纵向数据表明,个体能够在数十年间参与高强度游泳,在这几十年中成绩不断提高,直至在某些情况下成为其年龄组的世界纪录保持者。