Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • australia (1)
  • heart rate (2)
  • heat (7)
  • hematocrit (1)
  • human (2)
  • male (2)
  • motor skills (1)
  • plasma (2)
  • responses camp (1)
  • sodium (3)
  • sports (1)
  • sweat (2)
  • time factors (1)
  • young adult (1)
  • yoyo (1)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    To examine the physiological and performance responses to a heat-acclimatization camp in highly trained professional team-sport athletes. Eighteen male Australian Rules Football players trained for 2 wk in hot ambient conditions (31-33°C, humidity 34-50%). Players performed a laboratory-based heat-response test (24-min walk + 24 min seated; 44°C), a YoYo Intermittent Recovery Level 2 Test (YoYoIR2; indoor, temperate environment, 23°C) and standardized training drills (STD; outdoor, hot environment, 32°C) at the beginning and end of the camp. The heat-response test showed partial heat acclimatization (eg, a decrease in skin temperature, heart rate, and sweat sodium concentration, P < .05). In addition, plasma volume (PV, CO rebreathing, +2.68 [0.83; 4.53] mL/kg) and distance covered during both the YoYoIR2 (+311 [260; 361] m) and the STD (+45.6 [13.9; 77.4] m) increased postcamp (P < .01). None of the performance changes showed clear correlations with PV changes (r < .24), but the improvements in running STD distance in hot environment were correlated with changes in hematocrit during the heat-response test (r = -.52, 90%CI [-.77; -.12]). There was no clear correlation between the performance improvements in temperate and hot ambient conditions (r < .26). Running performance in both hot and temperate environments was improved after a football training camp in hot ambient conditions that stimulated heat acclimatization. However, physiological and performance responses were highly individual, and the absence of correlations between physical-performance improvements in hot and temperate environments suggests that their physiological basis might differ.

    Citation

    Sebastien Racinais, Martin Buchheit, Johann Bilsborough, Pitre C Bourdon, Justin Cordy, Aaron J Coutts. Physiological and performance responses to a training camp in the heat in professional Australian football players. International journal of sports physiology and performance. 2014 Jul;9(4):598-603

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 24088292

    View Full Text