Cunha Lúcio A, Costa Júlio A, Marques Elisa A, Brito João, Lastella Michele, Figueiredo Pedro
Research Center in Sports Sciences, Health Sciences and Human Development, CIDESD, University of Maia, Maia, Portugal.
Portugal Football School, Portuguese Football Federation, Cruz Quebrada, Portugal.
Sports Med Open. 2023 Jul 18;9(1):58. doi: 10.1186/s40798-023-00599-z.
Sleep is essential for maximal performance in the athletic population. Despite that, the sport context has many factors that can negatively influence athletes' sleep and subsequent recovery.
The purpose of this systematic review was to synthesize the most recent literature regarding sleep interventions aimed at improving sleep and subsequent performance in athletes.
The present systematic review was conducted based on the PRISMA guidelines and the PICOS approach. The search was conducted in May 2022 using the electronic database PubMed, SPORTDiscus via EBSCOhost, and Web of Science. Once extracted, studies were included if they met the following criteria: (1) participants were athletes of individual or team sports; (2) implemented an intervention aimed at improving sleep; (3) measured at least one objective performance/recovery outcome; and (4) reported the relationship between sleep and performance.
The search returned 1584 records. Following the screening, a total of 25 studies met our inclusion criteria. All the included articles were intervention studies published between 2011 and 2021. The included studies implemented various sleep interventions, such as sleep hygiene, naps, sleep extension, light manipulation, cold water immersion, mindfulness, or a combination of two or more strategies. Sleep extension and naps were the most representative and most effective strategies to improve sleep and performance. Mindfulness and light manipulation demonstrated promising results, but more studies are needed to confirm these findings. Sleep hygiene, removing electronic devices at night, and cold water immersion had no effects on sleep and subsequent performance/recovery, but these results are based on a few studies only.
While acknowledging the limited amount of high-quality evidence reviewed, it appears that increasing sleep duration at night or through napping was the most effective interventions to improve physical and/or cognitive performance. Protocol Registration This protocol was registered in the International Platform of Registered Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocols (INPLASY) on May 11, 2022, with the registration number INPLASY202250069.
睡眠对于运动员发挥最佳水平至关重要。尽管如此,运动环境中有许多因素会对运动员的睡眠及后续恢复产生负面影响。
本系统评价的目的是综合有关旨在改善运动员睡眠及后续表现的睡眠干预措施的最新文献。
本系统评价依据PRISMA指南和PICOS方法进行。2022年5月使用电子数据库PubMed、通过EBSCOhost的SPORTDiscus以及Web of Science进行检索。提取后,若研究符合以下标准则纳入:(1)参与者为个人或团体运动项目的运动员;(2)实施了旨在改善睡眠的干预措施;(3)测量了至少一项客观表现/恢复结果;(4)报告了睡眠与表现之间的关系。
检索共返回1584条记录。筛选后,共有25项研究符合我们的纳入标准。所有纳入文章均为2011年至2021年间发表的干预性研究。纳入研究实施了各种睡眠干预措施,如睡眠卫生、午睡、延长睡眠时间、光照控制、冷水浸泡、正念或两种或更多策略的组合。延长睡眠时间和午睡是改善睡眠和表现的最具代表性且最有效的策略。正念和光照控制显示出有前景的结果,但需要更多研究来证实这些发现。睡眠卫生、夜间移除电子设备以及冷水浸泡对睡眠及后续表现/恢复没有影响,但这些结果仅基于少数研究。
尽管认识到所审查的高质量证据数量有限,但增加夜间睡眠时间或通过午睡似乎是改善身体和/或认知表现的最有效干预措施。方案注册 本方案于2022年5月11日在国际注册系统评价和Meta分析方案平台(INPLASY)注册,注册号为INPLASY202250069。