Effects of 8-week endurance and resistance training programmes on cardiovascular stress responses, life stress and coping

被引:18
作者
Chovanec, Lukas [1 ]
Groepel, Peter [2 ]
机构
[1] Comenius Univ, Fac Phys Educ & Sports, Bratislava, Slovakia
[2] Univ Vienna, Dept Appl Psychol Work Educ & Econ, Vienna, Austria
关键词
Physical activity; exercise; sport; stress; coping; PSYCHOSOCIAL STRESS; PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; CARDIORESPIRATORY FITNESS; AEROBIC EXERCISE; HEART-RATE; PSYCHOLOGICAL RESPONSES; MENTAL-HEALTH; SOCIAL STRESS; REACTIVITY; STRATEGIES;
D O I
10.1080/02640414.2020.1756672
中图分类号
G8 [体育];
学科分类号
04 ; 0403 ;
摘要
This study tested the effect of 8-week endurance and resistance training programmes on cardiovascular stress responses, life stress, and coping. Fifty-two untrained but healthy female students were randomised to an 8-week endurance training, an 8-week resistance training, or a wait list control group. Before and after the training intervention, we assessed the groups' cardiorespiratory fitness (VO2max test), self-reported life stress, coping strategies and cardiovascular reactivity to and recovery from a standardised laboratory stressor. Both endurance and resistance training programmes caused physiological adaptation in terms of increased VO2max after the intervention. For stress and coping parameters, participants in the training groups improved cardiovascular recovery from stress and reported having less stress in their everyday life after the intervention than participants in the control group, while the two training groups did not differ from each other. We did not find any significant differences in heart rate reactivity and coping strategies between the study groups. These results partly support that exercise training has stress-reducing benefits regardless of the type of exercise. Both endurance and resistance exercise activities may be effectively used to improve stress regulation competence while having less impact on changing specific coping strategies.
引用
收藏
页码:1699 / 1707
页数:9
相关论文
共 52 条
[1]  
Al Sudani A.A. D., 2015, International Journal of Science Culture and Sport (IntJSCS), V3, P98, DOI DOI 10.14486/IJSCS408
[2]   Relationships between leisure time physical activity and perceived stress [J].
Aldana, SG ;
Sutton, LD ;
Jacobson, BH ;
Quirk, MG .
PERCEPTUAL AND MOTOR SKILLS, 1996, 82 (01) :315-321
[3]   Who Uses Exercise as a Coping Strategy for Stress? Results From a National Survey of Canadians [J].
Cairney, John ;
Kwan, Latthew Y. W. ;
Veldhuizen, Scott ;
Faulkner, Guy E. J. .
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY & HEALTH, 2014, 11 (05) :908-916
[4]   Personality and Coping [J].
Carver, Charles S. ;
Connor-Smith, Jennifer .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2010, 61 :679-704
[5]   ASSESSING COPING STRATEGIES - A THEORETICALLY BASED APPROACH [J].
CARVER, CS ;
SCHEIER, MF ;
WEINTRAUB, JK .
JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1989, 56 (02) :267-283
[6]  
CLAYTOR RP, 1991, MED SCI SPORT EXER, V23, P873
[7]  
COHEN S, 1988, CLAR SYMP, P31
[8]  
Colley Rachel C., 2011, HEALTH REPORTS, V22
[9]   Coping with stress during childhood and adolescence: Problems, progress, and potential in theory and research [J].
Compas, BE ;
Connor-Smith, JK ;
Saltzman, H ;
Thomsen, AH ;
Wadsworth, ME .
PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 2001, 127 (01) :87-127
[10]  
CREWS D, 1987, MED SCI SPORT EXER S, P114