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http://hdl.handle.net/10174/29746
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Title: | Effects on performance of active and passive hypoxia as a re-warm-up routine before a 100-metre swimming time trial: a randomized crossover study |
Authors: | Ramos-Campo, Domingo Batalha, Nuno Olcina, Guillermo Parraça, José Alberto Sousa, João Paulo Tomas-Carus, Pablo |
Keywords: | hypoxia swimming re-warm-up |
Issue Date: | 2020 |
Publisher: | Biology of Sport |
Citation: | Ramos-Campo DJ, Batalha N, Olcina G et al. Effects on performance of active and passive hypoxia as a re-warm-up routine before a 100-metre swimming time trial: a randomized crossover study. Biol Sport. 2020;37(2):113-119 |
Abstract: | Passive and active hypoxia could be used as a tool during a transitional phase to maintain the
effects of warm-up and optimize athletic performance. Our purpose was to evaluate and compare the effects
of four different re-warm-up strategies, i.e. rest in normoxia (RN) at FiO2 = 20.9%, rest in hypoxia (RH) at
FiO2 = 15%, active (5 minutes dryland-based exercise circuit) in normoxia (AN) and active in hypoxia (AH),
during the transitional phase, on subsequent 100 m maximal swimming performance. Thirteen competitive
swimmers (n = 7 males; n = 6 females; age: 15.1±2.1 years; height: 164.7±8.8 cm; weight: 58.1±9.7 kg;
100 m season’s best time 72.0±11.8 s) completed a 20-minute standardized in-water warm-up followed by
a 30-minute randomized transitional phase and 100 m freestyle time trial. Compared to AH (73.4±6.2 s),
100 m swim time trials were significantly (p = 0.002; η2 = 0.766) slower in RN (75.7±6.7 s; p = 0.01),
AN (75.2±6.7 s; p = 0.038) and RH (75.0±6.4 s; p = 0.009). Moreover, compared to AH (36.3±0.4oC),
tympanic temperature was significantly lower (p<0.001; η2 = 0.828) at the end of the transitional phase in
passive conditions (RN: 35.9±0.6; p = 0.032; RH: 36.0±0.4; p = 0.05). In addition, countermovement jump η2
decline in tympanic temperature during a 30-minute transitional phase after warm-up, improving 100 m swimming
height at the end of the transitional phase was significantly higher in active than in passive conditions (p = 0.001;
= 0.728). A dryland-based circuit under hypoxia could be useful to swimmers, once it has attenuated the
performance in young amateur swimmers. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/29746 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | DES - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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