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Association between thermal responses, medical events, performance, heat acclimation and health status in male and female elite athletes during the 2019 Doha World Athletics Championships

PURPOSE: To determine associations between thermal responses, medical events, performance, heat acclimation and health status during a World Athletics Championships in hot-humid conditions. METHODS: From 305 marathon and race-walk starters, 83 completed a preparticipation questionnaire on health and...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Racinais, Sebastien, Havenith, George, Aylwin, Polly, Ihsan, Mohammed, Taylor, Lee, Adami, Paolo Emilio, Adamuz, Maria-Carmen, Alhammoud, Marine, Alonso, Juan Manuel, Bouscaren, Nicolas, Buitrago, Sebastian, Cardinale, Marco, van Dyk, Nicol, Esh, Chris J, Gomez-Ezeiza, Josu, Garrandes, Frederic, Holtzhausen, Louis, Labidi, Mariem, Lange, Gűnter, Lloyd, Alexander, Moussay, Sebastien, Mtibaa, Khouloud, Townsend, Nathan, Wilson, Mathew G, Bermon, Stephane
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8995810/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35165084
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bjsports-2021-104569
Descripción
Sumario:PURPOSE: To determine associations between thermal responses, medical events, performance, heat acclimation and health status during a World Athletics Championships in hot-humid conditions. METHODS: From 305 marathon and race-walk starters, 83 completed a preparticipation questionnaire on health and acclimation. Core (T(core); ingestible pill) and skin (T(skin); thermal camera) temperatures were measured in-competition in 56 and 107 athletes, respectively. 70 in-race medical events were analysed retrospectively. Performance (% personal best) and did not finish (DNF) were extracted from official results. RESULTS: Peak T(core) during competition reached 39.6°C±0.6°C (maximum 41.1°C). T(skin) decreased from 32.2°C±1.3°C to 31.0°C±1.4°C during the races (p<0.001). T(core) was not related to DNF (25% of starters) or medical events (p≥0.150), whereas T(skin), T(skin) rate of decrease and T(core)-to-T(skin) gradient were (p≤0.029). A third of the athletes reported symptoms in the 10 days preceding the event, mainly insomnia, diarrhoea and stomach pain, with diarrhoea (9% of athletes) increasing the risk of in-race medical events (71% vs 17%, p<0.001). Athletes (63%) who performed 5–30 days heat acclimation before the competition: ranked better (18±13 vs 28±13, p=0.009), displayed a lower peak T(core) (39.4°C±0.4°C vs 39.8°C±0.7°C, p=0.044) and larger in-race decrease in T(skin) (−1.4°C±1.0°C vs −0.9°C±1.2°C, p=0.060), than non-acclimated athletes. Although not significant, they also showed lower DNF (19% vs 30%, p=0.273) and medical events (19% vs 32%, p=0.179). CONCLUSION: T(skin), T(skin) rate of decrease and T(core)-to-T(skin) gradient were important indicators of heat tolerance. While heat-acclimated athletes ranked better, recent diarrhoea represented a significant risk factor for DNF and in-race medical events.