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Salivary nitrite content, cognition and power in Mixed Martial Arts fighters after rapid weight loss: a case study

BACKGROUND AND AIM: Rapid weight loss (RWL) is extensively practiced by combat sports athletes, including Mixed Martial Arts (MMA), but its effects on performance are not well established with different magnitudes of RWL, including those higher than 5% of total body weight. The aim of the present st...

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Autores principales: Camarço, Nathalia F., Sousa Neto, Ivo V., Nascimento, Dahan C., Almeida, Jeeser A., Vieira, Denis C. L., Rosa, Thiago S., Pereira, Guilherme B., Prestes, Jonato
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Whioce Publishing Pte. Ltd. 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6410658/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30873463
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author Camarço, Nathalia F.
Sousa Neto, Ivo V.
Nascimento, Dahan C.
Almeida, Jeeser A.
Vieira, Denis C. L.
Rosa, Thiago S.
Pereira, Guilherme B.
Prestes, Jonato
author_facet Camarço, Nathalia F.
Sousa Neto, Ivo V.
Nascimento, Dahan C.
Almeida, Jeeser A.
Vieira, Denis C. L.
Rosa, Thiago S.
Pereira, Guilherme B.
Prestes, Jonato
author_sort Camarço, Nathalia F.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND AIM: Rapid weight loss (RWL) is extensively practiced by combat sports athletes, including Mixed Martial Arts (MMA), but its effects on performance are not well established with different magnitudes of RWL, including those higher than 5% of total body weight. The aim of the present study was to follow MMA athletes during RWL with subsequent weight regain to evaluate the responses of isometric strength, power, cognition and salivary nitrite ([Formula: see text]) content. METHODS: Two professional male MMA fighters, same age, competing in the same weight category underwent two magnitudes of RWL before a simulated competition period. Anthropometric measures, records of nutritional status, training, voluntary dehydration strategies, salivary samples, cognition response, isometric strength and muscular power were obtained: (I) 7 days before combat, (II) at the weigh-in moment, and (III) in the combat day. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Athlete 1 lost 7.2 kg (9.1% of total bodyweight) and Athlete 2 lost 4.0 kg (5.3% of total bodyweight). Athlete 1 had a lower and misbalanced caloric ingestion (708 ± 428 kcal), ingested 6 L of water during the first 5 days of RWL, underwent 2 days of fasting, water and sodium restriction before weigh-in. Athlete 2 was supervised by a nutritionist, had a balanced diet (1600 ± 0 kcal), ingested 2 L of water during the first 6 days of RWL, underwent only 1 day of fasting and water restriction, and did not restrict sodium. As expected, there was a negative effect of RWL in the evaluated parameters at the weigh-in moment, while in the combat day, salivary [Formula: see text]) content. METHODS: Two professional male MMA fighters, same age, competing in the same weight category underwent two magnitudes of RWL before a simulated competition period. Anthropometric measures, records of nutritional status, training, voluntary dehydration strategies, salivary samples, cognition response, isometric strength and muscular power were obtained: (I) 7 days before combat, (II) at the weigh-in moment, and (III) in the combat day. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Athlete 1 lost 7.2 kg (9.1% of total bodyweight) and Athlete 2 lost 4.0 kg (5.3% of total bodyweight). Athlete 1 had a lower and misbalanced caloric ingestion (708 ± 428 kcal), ingested 6 L of water during the first 5 days of RWL, underwent 2 days of fasting, water and sodium restriction before weigh-in. Athlete 2 was supervised by a nutritionist, had a balanced diet (1600 ± 0 kcal), ingested 2 L of water during the first 6 days of RWL, underwent only 1 day of fasting and water restriction, and did not restrict sodium. As expected, there was a negative effect of RWL in the evaluated parameters at the weigh-in moment, while in the combat day, salivary [Formula: see text] was not completely reestablished at baseline levels (decreased by 35.9% in Athlete 1 and, 25.2% in Athlete 2, as compared with 7 days before). The athlete who underwent a lower weight loss (5.3%) presented better recovery of cognition and upper limbs power on the combat day as compared with the athlete who lost 9.1% of body weight. Although we cannot precisely conclude, this case report led us to believe that the recovery period between weigh-in and competition may be insufficient for total reestablishment of salivary [Formula: see text] after RWL, and higher amounts of RWL have negative impacts on average power and cognition when compared with lower RWL. Relevance for patients: Scientific aspects related with performance in MMA athletes brought to light the absence of studies investigating the recovery of isometric strength, power, cognition and salivary [Formula: see text] during RWL with subsequent weight regain. This study revealed that athletes from the same categories can adopt different magnitudes of weight loss, and that this procedure impacts several important measures, for example, the reduction of salivary [Formula: see text] is associated with the lower O(2) transport capacity, decreasing muscle performance.
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spelling pubmed-64106582019-03-14 Salivary nitrite content, cognition and power in Mixed Martial Arts fighters after rapid weight loss: a case study Camarço, Nathalia F. Sousa Neto, Ivo V. Nascimento, Dahan C. Almeida, Jeeser A. Vieira, Denis C. L. Rosa, Thiago S. Pereira, Guilherme B. Prestes, Jonato J Clin Transl Res Original Article BACKGROUND AND AIM: Rapid weight loss (RWL) is extensively practiced by combat sports athletes, including Mixed Martial Arts (MMA), but its effects on performance are not well established with different magnitudes of RWL, including those higher than 5% of total body weight. The aim of the present study was to follow MMA athletes during RWL with subsequent weight regain to evaluate the responses of isometric strength, power, cognition and salivary nitrite ([Formula: see text]) content. METHODS: Two professional male MMA fighters, same age, competing in the same weight category underwent two magnitudes of RWL before a simulated competition period. Anthropometric measures, records of nutritional status, training, voluntary dehydration strategies, salivary samples, cognition response, isometric strength and muscular power were obtained: (I) 7 days before combat, (II) at the weigh-in moment, and (III) in the combat day. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Athlete 1 lost 7.2 kg (9.1% of total bodyweight) and Athlete 2 lost 4.0 kg (5.3% of total bodyweight). Athlete 1 had a lower and misbalanced caloric ingestion (708 ± 428 kcal), ingested 6 L of water during the first 5 days of RWL, underwent 2 days of fasting, water and sodium restriction before weigh-in. Athlete 2 was supervised by a nutritionist, had a balanced diet (1600 ± 0 kcal), ingested 2 L of water during the first 6 days of RWL, underwent only 1 day of fasting and water restriction, and did not restrict sodium. As expected, there was a negative effect of RWL in the evaluated parameters at the weigh-in moment, while in the combat day, salivary [Formula: see text]) content. METHODS: Two professional male MMA fighters, same age, competing in the same weight category underwent two magnitudes of RWL before a simulated competition period. Anthropometric measures, records of nutritional status, training, voluntary dehydration strategies, salivary samples, cognition response, isometric strength and muscular power were obtained: (I) 7 days before combat, (II) at the weigh-in moment, and (III) in the combat day. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: Athlete 1 lost 7.2 kg (9.1% of total bodyweight) and Athlete 2 lost 4.0 kg (5.3% of total bodyweight). Athlete 1 had a lower and misbalanced caloric ingestion (708 ± 428 kcal), ingested 6 L of water during the first 5 days of RWL, underwent 2 days of fasting, water and sodium restriction before weigh-in. Athlete 2 was supervised by a nutritionist, had a balanced diet (1600 ± 0 kcal), ingested 2 L of water during the first 6 days of RWL, underwent only 1 day of fasting and water restriction, and did not restrict sodium. As expected, there was a negative effect of RWL in the evaluated parameters at the weigh-in moment, while in the combat day, salivary [Formula: see text] was not completely reestablished at baseline levels (decreased by 35.9% in Athlete 1 and, 25.2% in Athlete 2, as compared with 7 days before). The athlete who underwent a lower weight loss (5.3%) presented better recovery of cognition and upper limbs power on the combat day as compared with the athlete who lost 9.1% of body weight. Although we cannot precisely conclude, this case report led us to believe that the recovery period between weigh-in and competition may be insufficient for total reestablishment of salivary [Formula: see text] after RWL, and higher amounts of RWL have negative impacts on average power and cognition when compared with lower RWL. Relevance for patients: Scientific aspects related with performance in MMA athletes brought to light the absence of studies investigating the recovery of isometric strength, power, cognition and salivary [Formula: see text] during RWL with subsequent weight regain. This study revealed that athletes from the same categories can adopt different magnitudes of weight loss, and that this procedure impacts several important measures, for example, the reduction of salivary [Formula: see text] is associated with the lower O(2) transport capacity, decreasing muscle performance. Whioce Publishing Pte. Ltd. 2016-06-19 /pmc/articles/PMC6410658/ /pubmed/30873463 Text en Copyright © 2016, Whioce Publishing Pte. Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
spellingShingle Original Article
Camarço, Nathalia F.
Sousa Neto, Ivo V.
Nascimento, Dahan C.
Almeida, Jeeser A.
Vieira, Denis C. L.
Rosa, Thiago S.
Pereira, Guilherme B.
Prestes, Jonato
Salivary nitrite content, cognition and power in Mixed Martial Arts fighters after rapid weight loss: a case study
title Salivary nitrite content, cognition and power in Mixed Martial Arts fighters after rapid weight loss: a case study
title_full Salivary nitrite content, cognition and power in Mixed Martial Arts fighters after rapid weight loss: a case study
title_fullStr Salivary nitrite content, cognition and power in Mixed Martial Arts fighters after rapid weight loss: a case study
title_full_unstemmed Salivary nitrite content, cognition and power in Mixed Martial Arts fighters after rapid weight loss: a case study
title_short Salivary nitrite content, cognition and power in Mixed Martial Arts fighters after rapid weight loss: a case study
title_sort salivary nitrite content, cognition and power in mixed martial arts fighters after rapid weight loss: a case study
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6410658/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30873463
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