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Changes in selected biochemical, muscular strength, power, and endurance measures during deliberate overreaching and tapering in rugby league players

journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by Aaron Coutts, Peter Reaburn, A Murphy, Terrence Piva
The purpose of this study was to examine the influence of overreaching on muscle strength, power, endurance and selected biochemical responses in rugby league players. Seven semi-professional rugby league players (V·O 2max = 56.1 ± 1.7 mL · kg -1 · min -1; age = 25.7 ± 2.6 yr; BMI = 27.6 ± 2.0) completed 6 weeks of progressive overload training with limited recovery periods. A short 7-day stepwise reduction taper immediately followed the overload period. Measures of muscular strength, power and endurance and selected biochemical parameters were taken before and after overload training and taper. Multistage fitness test running performance was significantly reduced (12.3 %) following the overload period. Although most other performance measures tended to decrease following the overload period, only peak hamstring torque at 1.05 rad · s -1 was significantly reduced (p < 0.05). Following the taper, a significant increase in peak hamstring torque and isokinetic work at both slow (1.05 rad · s -1) and fast (5.25 rad · s -1) movement velocities were observed. Minimum clinically important performance decreases were measured in a multistage fitness test, vertical jump, 3 RM squat and 3-RM bench press and chin-up max following the overload period. Following the taper, minimum clinically important increases in the multistage fitness test, vertical jump, 3-RM squat and 3-RM bench press and chin-up max and 10-m sprint performance were observed. Compared to resting measures, the plasma testosterone to cortisol ratio, plasma glutamate, plasma glutamine to glutamate ratio and plasma creatine kinase activity demonstrated significant changes at the end of the overload training period (p < 0.05). These results suggest that muscular strength, power and endurance were reduced following the overload training, indicating a state of overreaching. The most likely explanation for the decreased performance is increased muscle damage via a decrease in the anabolic-catabolic balance.

Funding

Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)

History

Volume

28

Issue

2

Start Page

116

End Page

124

Number of Pages

9

eISSN

1439-3964

ISSN

0172-4622

Location

Germany

Publisher

Thieme Publishing

Language

en-aus

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Acceptance Date

2006-03-27

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

International Journal of Sports Medicine

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