Maggioni Martina Anna, Rundfeldt Lea Christiane, Gunga Hanns-Christian, Joerres Marc, Merati Giampiero, Steinach Mathias
Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Corporate Member of Freie Universität Berlin, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, and Berlin Institute of Health, Institute of Physiology, Center for Space Medicine and Extreme Environments, Berlin, Germany.
Department of Biomedical Sciences for Health, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milan, Italy.
Front Physiol. 2020 Jul 24;11:731. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2020.00731. eCollection 2020.
Cardiac autonomic modulation of heart rate, assessed by heart rate variability (HRV), is commonly used to monitor training status. HRV is usually measured in athletes after awakening in the morning in the supine position. Whether recording during standing reveals additional information compared to supine remains unclear. We aimed to evaluate the association between short-duration HRV, assessed both in the supine and standing position, and a low-intensity long-duration performance (walking ultramarathon), as well as training experience. Twenty-five competitors in a 100 km walking ultramarathon underwent pre-race supine (12 min) and standing (6 min) HR recordings, whereas performance and subjective training experience were assessed post-race. There were no significant differences in both supine and standing HRV between finishers ( = 14) and non-finishers ( = 11, mean distance 67 km). In finishers, a slower race velocity was significantly correlated with a higher decrease in parasympathetic drive during position change [larger decrease in High Frequency power normalized units (HF : = -0.7, = 0.01) and higher increase in the detrended fluctuation analysis alpha 1 index (DFA1: = 0.6, = 0.04)]. Highly trained athletes accounted for higher HF during standing compared to poorly trained competitors (+11.5, = 0.01). Similarly, greater training volume (total km/week) would predict higher HF during standing ( = 0.5, = 0.01). HRV assessment in both supine and standing position may provide additional information on the dynamic adaptability of cardiac autonomic modulation to physiologic challenges and therefore be more valuable for performance prediction than a simple assessment of supine HRV. Self-reported training experience may reliably associate with parasympathetic drive, therefore indirectly predicting long-term aerobic performance in ultramarathon walking races.
通过心率变异性(HRV)评估的心脏自主神经对心率的调节,常用于监测训练状态。HRV通常在运动员早晨醒来仰卧位时进行测量。与仰卧位相比,站立位记录是否能揭示更多信息尚不清楚。我们旨在评估仰卧位和站立位评估的短时长HRV与低强度长时间运动表现(超长跑步行)以及训练经验之间的关联。25名参加100公里超长跑步行比赛的选手在赛前进行了仰卧位(12分钟)和站立位(6分钟)的心率记录,而运动表现和主观训练经验在赛后进行评估。完赛者(n = 14)和未完赛者(n = 11,平均距离67公里)在仰卧位和站立位的HRV均无显著差异。在完赛者中,较慢的比赛速度与体位变化期间副交感神经驱动力的更大下降显著相关[高频功率标准化单位(HF nu)的更大下降:r = -0.7,p = 0.01;去趋势波动分析α1指数(DFA1)的更高增加:r = 0.6,p = 0.04]。与训练不足的选手相比,训练有素的运动员在站立位时的HF nu更高(+11.5,p = 0.01)。同样,更大的训练量(每周总公里数)可预测站立位时更高的HF nu(r = 0.5,p = 0.01)。仰卧位和站立位的HRV评估可能会提供有关心脏自主神经调节对生理挑战的动态适应性的更多信息,因此对于运动表现预测可能比单纯评估仰卧位HRV更有价值。自我报告的训练经验可能与副交感神经驱动力可靠相关,从而间接预测超长跑步行比赛中的长期有氧运动表现。