Heart Rate Variability is a Moderating Factor in the Workload-Injury Relationship of Competitive CrossFit™ Athletes

Heart rate variability (HRV) is a popular tool for monitoring training adaptation and readiness in athletes, but it also has the potential to indicate early signs of somatic tissue overload prior to the onset of pain or fully developed injury. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the...

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Main Author: Sean Williams, Thomas Booton, Matthew Watson, Daniel Rowland, Marco Altini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Uludag 2017-12-01
Series:Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jssm.org/researchjssm-16-443.xml.xml
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spelling doaj-cda4c489adee47039beabe3332d647342020-11-24T22:29:46ZengUniversity of UludagJournal of Sports Science and Medicine1303-29682017-12-01164443449Heart Rate Variability is a Moderating Factor in the Workload-Injury Relationship of Competitive CrossFit™ AthletesSean Williams, Thomas Booton, Matthew Watson, Daniel Rowland, Marco Altini0Department for Health, University of Bath, Bath, United KingdomHeart rate variability (HRV) is a popular tool for monitoring training adaptation and readiness in athletes, but it also has the potential to indicate early signs of somatic tissue overload prior to the onset of pain or fully developed injury. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the interaction between HRV, workloads, and risk of overuse problems in competitive CrossFit™ athletes. Daily resting HRV and workloads (duration × session-RPE) were recorded in six competitive CrossFit™ athletes across a 16 week period. The Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center Overuse Injury Questionnaire was distributed weekly by e-mail. Acute-to-chronic workload ratios (ACWR) and the rolling 7-day average of the natural logarithm of the square root of the mean sum of the squared differences between R–R intervals (Ln rMSSDweek) were parsed into tertiles (low, moderate/normal, and high) based on within-individual z-scores. The interaction between Ln rMSSDweek and ACWR on overuse injury risk in the subsequent week was assessed using a generalized linear mixed-effects model and magnitude-based inferences. The risk of overuse problems was substantially increased when a ‘low’ Ln rMSSDweek was seen in combination with a ‘high’ ACWR (relative risk [RR]: 2.61, 90% CI: 1.38 – 4.93). In contrast, high ACWRs were well-tolerated when Ln rMSSDweek remained ‘normal’ or was ‘high’. Monitoring HRV trends alongside workloads may provide useful information on an athlete’s emerging global pattern to loading. HRV monitoring may therefore be used by practitioners to adjust and individualise training load prescriptions, in order to minimise overuse injury risk.http://www.jssm.org/researchjssm-16-443.xml.xmlCardiac parasympathetic functionmonitoringtraining load
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sean Williams, Thomas Booton, Matthew Watson, Daniel Rowland, Marco Altini
spellingShingle Sean Williams, Thomas Booton, Matthew Watson, Daniel Rowland, Marco Altini
Heart Rate Variability is a Moderating Factor in the Workload-Injury Relationship of Competitive CrossFit™ Athletes
Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Cardiac parasympathetic function
monitoring
training load
author_facet Sean Williams, Thomas Booton, Matthew Watson, Daniel Rowland, Marco Altini
author_sort Sean Williams, Thomas Booton, Matthew Watson, Daniel Rowland, Marco Altini
title Heart Rate Variability is a Moderating Factor in the Workload-Injury Relationship of Competitive CrossFit™ Athletes
title_short Heart Rate Variability is a Moderating Factor in the Workload-Injury Relationship of Competitive CrossFit™ Athletes
title_full Heart Rate Variability is a Moderating Factor in the Workload-Injury Relationship of Competitive CrossFit™ Athletes
title_fullStr Heart Rate Variability is a Moderating Factor in the Workload-Injury Relationship of Competitive CrossFit™ Athletes
title_full_unstemmed Heart Rate Variability is a Moderating Factor in the Workload-Injury Relationship of Competitive CrossFit™ Athletes
title_sort heart rate variability is a moderating factor in the workload-injury relationship of competitive crossfit™ athletes
publisher University of Uludag
series Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
issn 1303-2968
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Heart rate variability (HRV) is a popular tool for monitoring training adaptation and readiness in athletes, but it also has the potential to indicate early signs of somatic tissue overload prior to the onset of pain or fully developed injury. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the interaction between HRV, workloads, and risk of overuse problems in competitive CrossFit™ athletes. Daily resting HRV and workloads (duration × session-RPE) were recorded in six competitive CrossFit™ athletes across a 16 week period. The Oslo Sports Trauma Research Center Overuse Injury Questionnaire was distributed weekly by e-mail. Acute-to-chronic workload ratios (ACWR) and the rolling 7-day average of the natural logarithm of the square root of the mean sum of the squared differences between R–R intervals (Ln rMSSDweek) were parsed into tertiles (low, moderate/normal, and high) based on within-individual z-scores. The interaction between Ln rMSSDweek and ACWR on overuse injury risk in the subsequent week was assessed using a generalized linear mixed-effects model and magnitude-based inferences. The risk of overuse problems was substantially increased when a ‘low’ Ln rMSSDweek was seen in combination with a ‘high’ ACWR (relative risk [RR]: 2.61, 90% CI: 1.38 – 4.93). In contrast, high ACWRs were well-tolerated when Ln rMSSDweek remained ‘normal’ or was ‘high’. Monitoring HRV trends alongside workloads may provide useful information on an athlete’s emerging global pattern to loading. HRV monitoring may therefore be used by practitioners to adjust and individualise training load prescriptions, in order to minimise overuse injury risk.
topic Cardiac parasympathetic function
monitoring
training load
url http://www.jssm.org/researchjssm-16-443.xml.xml
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