Acute Dehydration Impairs Endurance Without Modulating Neuromuscular Function

Introduction/Purpose: This study examined the influence of acute dehydration on neuromuscular function.Methods: On separate days, combat sports athletes experienced in acute dehydration practices (n = 14) completed a 3 h passive heating intervention (40°C, 63% relative humidity) to induce dehydratio...

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Main Authors: Oliver R. Barley, Dale W. Chapman, Anthony J. Blazevich, Chris R. Abbiss
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Physiology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2018.01562/full
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spelling doaj-a33efa77cc4b46688cb3a610b0d817b02020-11-24T21:48:38ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Physiology1664-042X2018-11-01910.3389/fphys.2018.01562421826Acute Dehydration Impairs Endurance Without Modulating Neuromuscular FunctionOliver R. BarleyDale W. ChapmanAnthony J. BlazevichChris R. AbbissIntroduction/Purpose: This study examined the influence of acute dehydration on neuromuscular function.Methods: On separate days, combat sports athletes experienced in acute dehydration practices (n = 14) completed a 3 h passive heating intervention (40°C, 63% relative humidity) to induce dehydration (DHY) or a thermoneutral euhydration control (25°C, 50% relative humidity: CON). In the ensuing 3 h ad libitum fluid and food intake was allowed, after which participants performed fatiguing exercise consisting of repeated unilateral knee extensions at 85% of their maximal voluntary isometric contraction (MVIC) torque until task failure. Both before and after the fatiguing protocol participants performed six MVICs during which measures of central and peripheral neuromuscular function were made. Urine and whole blood samples to assess urine specific gravity, urine osmolality, haematocrit and serum osmolality were collected before, immediately and 3 h after intervention.Results: Body mass was reduced by 3.2 ± 1.1% immediately after DHY (P < 0.001) but recovered by 3 h. Urine and whole blood markers indicated dehydration immediately after DHY, although blood markers were not different to CON at 3 h. Participants completed 28% fewer knee extensions at 85% MVIC (P < 0.001, g = 0.775) and reported a greater perception of fatigue (P = 0.012) 3 h after DHY than CON despite peak torque results being unaffected. No between-condition differences were observed in central or peripheral indicators of neuromuscular function at any timepoint.Conclusion: Results indicate that acute dehydration of 3.2% body mass followed by 3 h of recovery impairs muscular strength-endurance and increases fatigue perception without changes in markers of central or peripheral function. These findings suggest that altered fatigue perception underpins muscular performance decrements in recovery from acute dehydration.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2018.01562/fullcombat sportsdehydrationhypohydrationweight cuttingweight loss
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Oliver R. Barley
Dale W. Chapman
Anthony J. Blazevich
Chris R. Abbiss
spellingShingle Oliver R. Barley
Dale W. Chapman
Anthony J. Blazevich
Chris R. Abbiss
Acute Dehydration Impairs Endurance Without Modulating Neuromuscular Function
Frontiers in Physiology
combat sports
dehydration
hypohydration
weight cutting
weight loss
author_facet Oliver R. Barley
Dale W. Chapman
Anthony J. Blazevich
Chris R. Abbiss
author_sort Oliver R. Barley
title Acute Dehydration Impairs Endurance Without Modulating Neuromuscular Function
title_short Acute Dehydration Impairs Endurance Without Modulating Neuromuscular Function
title_full Acute Dehydration Impairs Endurance Without Modulating Neuromuscular Function
title_fullStr Acute Dehydration Impairs Endurance Without Modulating Neuromuscular Function
title_full_unstemmed Acute Dehydration Impairs Endurance Without Modulating Neuromuscular Function
title_sort acute dehydration impairs endurance without modulating neuromuscular function
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Physiology
issn 1664-042X
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Introduction/Purpose: This study examined the influence of acute dehydration on neuromuscular function.Methods: On separate days, combat sports athletes experienced in acute dehydration practices (n = 14) completed a 3 h passive heating intervention (40°C, 63% relative humidity) to induce dehydration (DHY) or a thermoneutral euhydration control (25°C, 50% relative humidity: CON). In the ensuing 3 h ad libitum fluid and food intake was allowed, after which participants performed fatiguing exercise consisting of repeated unilateral knee extensions at 85% of their maximal voluntary isometric contraction (MVIC) torque until task failure. Both before and after the fatiguing protocol participants performed six MVICs during which measures of central and peripheral neuromuscular function were made. Urine and whole blood samples to assess urine specific gravity, urine osmolality, haematocrit and serum osmolality were collected before, immediately and 3 h after intervention.Results: Body mass was reduced by 3.2 ± 1.1% immediately after DHY (P < 0.001) but recovered by 3 h. Urine and whole blood markers indicated dehydration immediately after DHY, although blood markers were not different to CON at 3 h. Participants completed 28% fewer knee extensions at 85% MVIC (P < 0.001, g = 0.775) and reported a greater perception of fatigue (P = 0.012) 3 h after DHY than CON despite peak torque results being unaffected. No between-condition differences were observed in central or peripheral indicators of neuromuscular function at any timepoint.Conclusion: Results indicate that acute dehydration of 3.2% body mass followed by 3 h of recovery impairs muscular strength-endurance and increases fatigue perception without changes in markers of central or peripheral function. These findings suggest that altered fatigue perception underpins muscular performance decrements in recovery from acute dehydration.
topic combat sports
dehydration
hypohydration
weight cutting
weight loss
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2018.01562/full
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