Post-exercise hot or cold water immersion does not alter perception of effort or neuroendocrine responses during subsequent moderate-intensity exercise

被引:2
作者
Menzies, Campbell [1 ]
Clarke, Neil D. [2 ]
Pugh, Christopher J. A. [3 ]
Steward, Charles J. [1 ]
Thake, C. Douglas [1 ]
Cullen, Tom [1 ]
机构
[1] Coventry Univ, Ctr Phys Act Sport & Exercise Sci, Coventry CV1 5FB, England
[2] Birmingham City Univ, Coll Life Sci, Fac Hlth Educ & Life Sci, Birmingham, England
[3] Cardiff Metropolitan Univ, Cardiff Sch of?Sport & Hlth Sci, Cardiff, Wales
关键词
cooling; exercise; heating; recovery; TERM HEAT ACCLIMATION; ENDURANCE EXERCISE; PLASMA; BLOOD; TEMPERATURE; RECOVERY; DEHYDRATION; PERFORMANCE; ADAPTATION; BOUTS;
D O I
10.1113/EP091932
中图分类号
Q4 [生理学];
学科分类号
071003 ;
摘要
Post-exercise hot (HWI) and cold (CWI) water immersion are popular strategies used by athletes in a range of sporting contexts, such as enhancing recovery or adaptation. However, prolonged heating bouts increase neuroendocrine responses that are associated with perceptions of fatigue. Fourteen endurance-trained runners performed three trials consisting of two 45-min runs at 95% lactate threshold on a treadmill separated by 6 h of recovery. Following the first run, participants completed one of HWI (30 min, 40 degrees C), CWI (15 min, 14 degrees C) or control (CON, 30 min rest in ambient conditions) in a randomised order. Perceived effort and recovery were measured using ratings of perceived exertion (RPE) and the Acute Recovery and Stress Scale (ARSS), whilst physiological responses including venous concentrations of a range of neuroendocrine markers, superficial femoral blood flow, heart rate and rectal temperature were measured. Exercise increased neuroendocrine responses of interleukin-6, adrenaline and noradrenaline (all P < 0.001). Additionally, perceptions of overall recovery (P < 0.001), mental performance capacity (P = 0.02), physical performance capability (P = 0.01) and emotional balance (P = 0.03) were reduced prior to the second run. However, there was no effect of condition on these variables (P > 0.05), nor RPE (P = 0.68), despite differences in rectal temperature, superficial femoral blood flow following the first run, and participants' expected recovery prior to the intervention (all P < 0.001). Therefore, athletes may engage in post-exercise hot or cold-water immersion without negatively impacting moderate-intensity training sessions performed later the same day.
引用
收藏
页码:1505 / 1516
页数:12
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