Department of Tourism, Sport and Society, Lincoln University, PO Box 85084, Christchurch, 7647, New Zealand.
Institute of Sport, Exercise, and Active Living, Victoria University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Sports Med. 2018 Feb;48(2):431-446. doi: 10.1007/s40279-017-0809-9.
While adaptation to hypoxia at natural or simulated altitude has long been used with endurance athletes, it has only recently gained popularity for team-sport athletes.
To analyse the effect of hypoxic interventions on high-intensity intermittent running performance in team-sport athletes.
A systematic literature search of five journal databases was performed. Percent change in performance (distance covered) in the Yo-Yo intermittent recovery test (level 1 and level 2 were used without differentiation) in hypoxic (natural or simulated altitude) and control (sea level or normoxic placebo) groups was meta-analyzed with a mixed model. The modifying effects of study characteristics (type and dose of hypoxic exposure, training duration, post-altitude duration) were estimated with fixed effects, random effects allowed for repeated measurement within studies and residual real differences between studies, and the standard-error weighting factors were derived or imputed via standard deviations of change scores. Effects and their uncertainty were assessed with magnitude-based inference, with a smallest important improvement of 4% estimated via between-athlete standard deviations of performance at baseline.
Ten studies qualified for inclusion, but two were excluded owing to small sample size and risk of publication bias. Hypoxic interventions occurred over a period of 7-28 days, and the range of total hypoxic exposure (in effective altitude-hours) was 4.5-33 km h in the intermittent-hypoxia studies and 180-710 km h in the live-high studies. There were 11 control and 15 experimental study-estimates in the final meta-analysis. Training effects were moderate and very likely beneficial in the control groups at 1 week (20 ± 14%, percent estimate, ± 90% confidence limits) and 4-week post-intervention (25 ± 23%). The intermittent and live-high hypoxic groups experienced additional likely beneficial gains at 1 week (13 ± 16%; 13 ± 15%) and 4-week post-intervention (19 ± 20%; 18 ± 19%). The difference in performance between intermittent and live-high interventions was unclear, as were the dose of hypoxia and inclusion of training in hypoxia.
Hypoxic intervention appears to be a worthwhile training strategy for improvement in high-intensity running performance in team-sport athletes, with enhanced performance over control groups persisting for at least 4 weeks post-intervention. Pending further research on the type of hypoxia, dose of hypoxia and training in hypoxia, coaches have considerable scope for customising hypoxic training methods to best suit their team's training schedule.
尽管在自然或模拟海拔高度适应缺氧已经被耐力运动员长期使用,但它最近才在团队运动运动员中流行起来。
分析缺氧干预对团队运动运动员高强度间歇跑表现的影响。
对五个期刊数据库进行了系统的文献检索。使用混合模型对缺氧(自然或模拟海拔)和对照(海平面或常氧安慰剂)组中 Yo-Yo 间歇恢复测试(1 级和 2 级未区分使用)的表现(覆盖距离)的百分比变化进行荟萃分析。使用固定效应估计研究特征(缺氧暴露的类型和剂量、训练持续时间、高原后持续时间)的调节作用,允许在研究中进行重复测量,并在研究之间产生残余真实差异,标准误差加权因子通过变化分数的标准差推导或内插。通过使用基于幅度的推断评估效果及其不确定性,通过在基线时的运动员间表现标准差估计 4%的最小重要改善。
有 10 项研究符合纳入标准,但由于样本量小和发表偏倚的风险,有 2 项研究被排除在外。缺氧干预持续了 7-28 天,间歇缺氧研究中的总缺氧暴露(有效海拔小时数)范围为 4.5-33km/h,而生活高海拔研究中的范围为 180-710km/h。最终荟萃分析中有 11 个对照和 15 个实验研究估计。在 1 周(20 ± 14%,百分比估计值,90%置信区间)和 4 周干预后(25 ± 23%),对照组的训练效果为中度且非常可能有益。间歇和生活高海拔缺氧组在 1 周(13 ± 16%;13 ± 15%)和 4 周干预后(19 ± 20%;18 ± 19%)也有额外的可能有益的收益。间歇和生活高海拔干预之间的效果差异不明确,缺氧的剂量和训练也不明确。
缺氧干预似乎是提高团队运动运动员高强度跑步表现的一种有价值的训练策略,与对照组相比,至少在干预后 4 周内,性能的提高仍在持续。在进一步研究缺氧的类型、缺氧的剂量和训练方面,教练们有很大的空间来定制缺氧训练方法,以最适合他们团队的训练计划。