AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigated how different breath-hold (BH) conditions affect aerobic fitness in elite male rugby players, specifically looking at the impact of face immersion and exercise.
  • The participants underwent five different warm-up conditions, and results showed significant differences in key metrics like red blood cells and peak oxygen uptake across these conditions.
  • Notably, the dynamic dry BH condition resulted in the highest aerobic performance, indicating that this specific warm-up could enhance performance in elite athletes.

Article Abstract

The effects of face immersion and concurrent exercise on the diving reflex evoked by breath-hold (BH) differ, yet little is known about the combined effects of different BH conditions on aerobic fitness in elite athletes. This study aimed to assess the acute effects of various BH conditions on 18 male elite rugby players (age: 23.5 ± 1.8 years; height: 183.3 ± 3.4 cm; body mass: 84.8 ± 8.5 kg) and identify the BH condition eliciting the greatest aerobic fitness activation. Participants underwent five warm-up conditions: baseline regular breathing, dynamic dry BH (DD), static dry BH (SD), wet dynamic BH (WD), and wet static BH (WS). Significant differences ( < 0.05) were found in red blood cells (RBCs), red blood cell volume (RGB), and hematocrit (HCT) pre- and post-warm-up. Peak oxygen uptake (VOpeak) and relative oxygen uptake (VO/kgpeak) varied significantly across conditions, with BH groups showing notably higher values than the regular breathing group ( < 0.05). Interaction effects of facial immersion and movement conditions were significant for VOpeak, VO/kgpeak, and the cardiopulmonary optimal point ( < 0.05). Specifically, VOpeak and peak stroke volume (SVpeak) were significantly higher in the DD group compared to that in other conditions. Increases in VOpeak were strongly correlated with changes in RBCs and HCT induced by DD warm-up (r∆RBC = 0.84, r∆HCT = 0.77, < 0.01). In conclusion, DD BH warm-up appears to optimize subsequent aerobic performance in elite athletes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11355650PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life14080917DOI Listing

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