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Stress and recovery in sports: Effects on heart rate variability, cortisol, and subjective experience

Health and Fitness

Stress and recovery in sports: Effects on heart rate variability, cortisol, and subjective experience

P. Vacher, E. Filaire, et al.

Over 12 weeks with fifteen national swimmers, this study tracked training load alongside psychological questionnaires, salivary biomarkers (cortisol and sAA), and heart rate variability, revealing divergent time dynamics and intra-individual associations between load and recovery, stress, emotions, lnRMSSD, and the AOC. Research conducted by P. Vacher, E. Filaire, L. Mourot, M. Nicolas.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
This study aimed to investigate (1) the time-variations and (2) the repeated measures relationship between training load (TL) and psychological and physiological parameters and performance. Data were collected around 12-weeks of training in fifteen national swimmers. Psychological states were assessed using the RESTQ-36-R-Sport Questionnaire and the Sport Emotion Questionnaire. Subjects collected four saliva samples throughout the day at 1) 7 a.m. immediately after waking, 2) 30 min after waking, 3) 60 min after waking, and 4) 8 p.m., allowing us to calculate the area under the curve with respect to ground (AUCg) and the sAA over cortisol ratio (AOC). Finally, heart rate variability was computed using a submaximal 5'-5' running test. Time variations were analyzed throughout repeated measures ANOVA and repeated measures correlations were run using the "rmcorr" R package. Recovery-stress states and emotional markers showed quadratic curves, while para-sympathetic markers showed linear trajectories over time. Significant associations over time were found between TL and recovery, stress, emotional states, lnRMSSD and the AOC. Taken together, these results provided evidence that psychological and physiological states do not follow the same dynamics (i.e., linear vs. quadratic vs. no variation) in the functional training periodization condition. Our study also provided evidence that recovery-stress states, emotional states, lnRMSSD, and the AOC were of interest due to their intra-individual associations around the time with TL.
Publisher
International Journal of Psychophysiology
Published On
Jun 27, 2019
Authors
P. Vacher, E. Filaire, L. Mourot, M. Nicolas
Tags
training load
recovery-stress states
heart rate variability (lnRMSSD)
salivary biomarkers (AUCg, AOC)
emotional states
repeated measures analysis
functional training periodization
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