Dwayne L. Mann, Cassandra L Pattinson, Alicia Allan, Liam St Pierre, Sally Staton, Karen Thorpe, Kalina Rossa, Simon S. Smith
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As a result, there was a large cumulative sleep debt at race completion, which was not ‘reversed’ in the post-race period (up to 1 week). The deterioration in all four self-reported scales of perceived impairment during the race period was largely restored in the post-race period. This is the first study to document objective sleep-wake behaviors and subjective impairment of adventure racers, in the context of two geographically diverse, multi-day, international adventure races. Measures of sleep deprivation indicate that sleep debt was extreme and did not recover to pre-race levels within 1 week following each race. Despite this objective debt continuing, perceived impairment returned to pre-race levels quickly post-race. Therefore, further examination of actual and perceived sleep recovery is warranted. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
本研究的目的是调查参加两项国际多日探险比赛的运动员的睡眠-觉醒行为,并深入了解他们的感知障碍(睡眠、疲劳和认知功能)。24 名运动员参加了两项独立的探险比赛:澳大利亚昆士兰和美国阿拉斯加。每个人的睡眠时间都是通过动觉计测定的,选手们还自我报告了他们感觉到的睡眠障碍、睡眠损害、疲劳和认知功能。这些指数分别在赛前、赛中和赛后进行计算。与赛前相比,比赛期间的睡眠受到严重限制(昆士兰,7:46 [0:29] vs. 2:50 [1:01];阿拉斯加,7:39 [0:58] vs. 2:45 [2:05];平均值[标码],小时:毫米)。因此,比赛结束时累积的睡眠欠账较多,在赛后(长达一周)也无法 "逆转"。在比赛期间,所有四项自我报告的感知障碍量表均出现恶化,而在赛后则基本恢复。这是首次在两个不同地域的多日国际探险比赛中记录探险比赛者的客观睡眠-觉醒行为和主观障碍的研究。睡眠不足的测量结果表明,每次比赛后的一周内,睡眠负债都非常严重,无法恢复到赛前水平。尽管这种客观的睡眠欠缺仍在持续,但赛后感知到的损伤却很快恢复到了赛前水平。因此,有必要进一步研究实际和感知的睡眠恢复情况。探险比赛为研究睡眠、表现和恢复提供了一个独特的场景。
Sleep deprivation and recovery: Endurance racing as a novel model
The aim of this study was to investigate sleep-wake behavior and gain insights into perceived impairment (sleep, fatigue, and cognitive function) of athletes competing in two international multi-day adventure races. Twenty-four athletes took part across two independent adventure races: Queensland, Australia and Alaska, USA. Individual sleep periods were determined via actigraphy, and racers self-reported their perceived sleep disturbances, sleep impairment, fatigue and cognitive function. Each of these indices was calculated for pre-, during- and post-race periods. Sleep was severely restricted during the race period compared to pre-race (Queensland, 7:46 [0:29] vs. 2:50 [1:01]; Alaska, 7:39 [0:58] vs. 2:45 [2:05]; mean [SD], hh:mm). As a result, there was a large cumulative sleep debt at race completion, which was not ‘reversed’ in the post-race period (up to 1 week). The deterioration in all four self-reported scales of perceived impairment during the race period was largely restored in the post-race period. This is the first study to document objective sleep-wake behaviors and subjective impairment of adventure racers, in the context of two geographically diverse, multi-day, international adventure races. Measures of sleep deprivation indicate that sleep debt was extreme and did not recover to pre-race levels within 1 week following each race. Despite this objective debt continuing, perceived impairment returned to pre-race levels quickly post-race. Therefore, further examination of actual and perceived sleep recovery is warranted. Adventure racing presents a unique scenario to examine sleep, performance and recovery.