Hottenrott Laura, Gronwald Thomas, Hottenrott Kuno, Wiewelhove Thimo, Ferrauti Alexander
Department of Training and Exercise Science, Faculty of Sports Science, Ruhr University Bochum, Bochum, Germany.
Department of Performance, Neuroscience, Therapy and Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, Medical School Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.
Front Sports Act Living. 2021 Sep 3;3:612782. doi: 10.3389/fspor.2021.612782. eCollection 2021.
Viral diseases have different individual progressions and can lead to considerable risks/long-term consequences. Therefore, it is not suitable to give general recommendations on a time off from training for athletes. This case report aims to investigate the relevance of detecting heart rate (HR) and HR variability (HRV) during an orthostatic test (OT) to monitor the progression and recovery process during and after a viral disease in an elite endurance athlete. A 30-year-old elite marathon runner contracted a viral infection (upper respiratory tract infection) 4 weeks after a marathon race. RR intervals in HR time series in supine and standing positions were monitored daily in the morning. Analyzed parameters included HR, the time-domain HRV parameter root mean square of successive difference (RMSSD), peak HR (HRpeak) in a standing position, and the time to HR peak (tHRpeak). During the 6-day viral infection period, HR increased significantly by an average of 11 bpm in the supine position and by 22 bpm in the standing position. In addition, the RMSSD decreased from 20.8 to 4.2 ms, the HRpeak decreased by 13 bpm, and the tHRpeak increased by 18 s in the standing position significantly. There were no significant changes in the pre-viral infection RMSSD values in the supine position. The viral infection led to a significant change in HR and HRV parameters. The cardiac autonomic system reacted more sensitively in the standing position compared to the supine position after a viral infection in the present case study. These data have provided supportive rationale as to why the OT with a change from supine to standing body position and the detection of different indicators based on HR and a vagal driven time-domain HRV parameter (RMSSD) is likely to be useful to detect viral diseases early on when implemented in daily routine. Given the case study nature of the findings, future research has to be conducted to investigate whether the use of the OT might be able to offer an innovative, non-invasive, and time-efficient possibility to detect and evaluate the health status of (elite endurance) athletes.
病毒性疾病有不同的个体发展进程,并且会导致相当大的风险/长期后果。因此,针对运动员的停训时间给出一般性建议是不合适的。本病例报告旨在研究在直立试验(OT)期间检测心率(HR)和心率变异性(HRV)对于监测一名优秀耐力运动员在病毒性疾病期间及之后的病情发展和恢复过程的相关性。一名30岁的优秀马拉松运动员在一场马拉松比赛4周后感染了病毒(上呼吸道感染)。每天早晨监测仰卧位和站立位时HR时间序列中的RR间期。分析的参数包括HR、时域HRV参数连续差值均方根(RMSSD)、站立位时的峰值心率(HRpeak)以及达到HR峰值的时间(tHRpeak)。在为期6天的病毒感染期内,仰卧位时HR平均显著增加11次/分钟,站立位时增加22次/分钟。此外,站立位时RMSSD从20.8毫秒降至4.2毫秒,HRpeak下降13次/分钟,tHRpeak显著增加18秒。仰卧位时病毒感染前的RMSSD值无显著变化。病毒感染导致HR和HRV参数发生显著变化。在本病例研究中,病毒感染后,心脏自主神经系统在站立位时比仰卧位时反应更敏感。这些数据为以下观点提供了支持性依据:当在日常训练中实施时,从仰卧位到站立位身体姿势改变的OT以及基于HR和迷走神经驱动的时域HRV参数(RMSSD)检测不同指标,可能有助于早期发现病毒性疾病。鉴于研究结果的病例研究性质,未来必须开展研究以调查使用OT是否能够提供一种创新、非侵入性且高效的方法来检测和评估(优秀耐力)运动员的健康状况。