Sleep duration and physical performance during a 6-week military training course.

J Sleep Res

Sport and Exercise Science, School of Allied Health, Human Services and Sport, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Vic., Australia.

Published: December 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study examined how sleep affects physical performance during military training over 6 weeks, involving 22 officer-trainees from the New Zealand Defence Force.
  • - Participants were monitored for sleep duration and subjected to performance tests like running and push-ups, revealing slight performance advantages for those who slept more than 6:15 hours per night.
  • - The results showed that sleeping more positively impacted subjective wellbeing, especially reducing fatigue and soreness, compared to those sleeping less than 6:15 hours.

Article Abstract

Sleep is vital in influencing effective training adaptations in the military. This study aimed to assess the relationship between sleep and changes in physical performance over 6 weeks of military training. A total of 22 officer-trainees (age: 24 ± 5 years) from the New Zealand Defence Force were used for this prospective cohort study. Participants wore wrist-actigraphs to monitor sleep, completed subjective wellbeing questionnaires weekly, and were tested for: 2.4-km run time-trial, maximum press-up and curl-ups before and after 6 weeks of training. Average sleep duration was calculated over 36 nights (6:10 ± 0:28 hr:min), and sleep duration at the mid-point (6:15 hr:min) was used to stratify the trainees into two quantile groups (UNDERS: 5:51 ± 0:29 hr:min, n = 11) and (OVERS: 6:27 ± 0:09 hr:min, n = 11). There were no significant group × time interactions for 2.4-km run, press-ups or curl-ups (p > .05); however, small effects were observed in favour of OVERS for 2.4-km run (59.8 versus 44.9 s; d = 0.26) and press-ups (4.7 versus 3.2 reps; d = 0.45). Subjective wellbeing scores resulted in a significant group × time interaction (p < .05), with large effect sizes in favour of the OVERS group for Fatigue in Week 1 (d = 0.90) and Week 3 (d = 0.87), and Soreness in Week 3 (d = 1.09) and Week 4 (d = 0.95). Sleeping more than 6:15 hr:min per night over 6 weeks was associated with small benefits to aspects of physical performance, and moderate to large benefits on subjective wellbeing measures when compared with sleeping < 6:15 hr:min.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jsr.13393DOI Listing

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