Research Institute for Sport and Exercise Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, UNITED KINGDOM.
Department of Sport and Exercise, Birmingham City University, Birmingham, UNITED KINGDOM.
Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2020 Mar;52(3):637-644. doi: 10.1249/MSS.0000000000002169.
Preparation for competitive contact sport has been extensively researched. There are, however, limited data to guide players as to how the demands of their sport affect the energy requirements of recovery. We aimed to provide novel data on changes in resting metabolic rate (RMR) in contact sport athletes and relate these to the physical demands of training and competition.
Twenty-two elite professional Premiership Rugby Union players were recruited to the study. Indirect calorimetry (Vyntus CPX canopy; CareFusion) was used to measure RMR each morning of the competitive game week, in a fasted, rested state. External loads for training and game play were monitored and recorded using global positioning systems (Catapult Innovations, Australia), whereas internal loads were tracked using rate of perceived exertion scales. Collisions were reviewed and recorded by expert video analysts for contacts in general play (breakdown and tackle area) or the set piece (scrum or maul).
There were significant (P = 0.005) mean increases in RMR of approximately 231 kcal the morning after (game day [GD] + 1) and 3 d after the game (GD + 3), compared with the day before the game (GD - 1). The players were exposed to internal and external loads during the training week comparable to that of a match day; however, despite the equivocal loads between training and game play, there were no significant increases in RMR after training.
The collisions experienced in rugby match play are likely to be responsible for the significant increases in RMR at GD + 1 and GD + 3. Consequently, the measurement of RMR via indirect calorimetry may provide a novel noninvasive measure of the effects of collisions. This study provides a novel insight to the energy requirements of recovering from contact sport.
竞技接触性运动的准备工作已经得到了广泛的研究。然而,目前的数据有限,无法指导运动员了解他们运动的需求如何影响恢复的能量需求。我们旨在提供接触性运动运动员静息代谢率(RMR)变化的新数据,并将这些数据与训练和比赛的身体需求联系起来。
招募了 22 名精英职业英超橄榄球联盟球员参加这项研究。在禁食、休息的状态下,每天早上在竞技比赛周,使用间接测热法(Vyntus CPX 天篷;CareFusion)测量 RMR。使用全球定位系统(澳大利亚 Catapult Innovations)监测和记录训练和比赛中的外部负荷,而使用感知运动强度量表跟踪内部负荷。由专家视频分析师对一般比赛(混战和擒抱区)或特定比赛(争球或混战)中的碰撞进行审查和记录。
与比赛前一天(GD-1)相比,比赛后一天(GD+1)和第三天(GD+3)早晨 RMR 分别有显著(P=0.005)的约 231 千卡的平均增加。球员在训练周中经历的内部和外部负荷与比赛日相当;然而,尽管训练和比赛中的负荷相当,RMR 在训练后并没有显著增加。
橄榄球比赛中的碰撞很可能是导致 GD+1 和 GD+3 时 RMR 显著增加的原因。因此,通过间接测热法测量 RMR 可能提供一种非侵入性的新方法来衡量从接触性运动中恢复的效果。本研究为接触性运动恢复的能量需求提供了新的见解。