Title | Initial Weekly HRV Response is Related to the Prospective Change in VO2max in Female Soccer Players. | ||
Author | Esco, M R; Flatt, A A; Nakamura, F Y | ||
Journal | Int J Sports Med | Publication Year/Month | 2016-Jun |
PMID | 27042998 | PMCID | -N/A- |
Affiliation + expend | 1.Physical Education and Exercise Science, Human Performance Laboratory, Auburn University at Montgomery, Montgomery, United States. |
The aim of this study was to determine whether the early response in weekly measures of HRV, when derived from a smartphone application, were related to the eventual change in VO2max following an off-season training program in female soccer athletes. 9 female collegiate soccer players participated in an 11-week off-season conditioning program. In the week immediately before and after the training program, each participant performed a test on a treadmill to determine maximal oxygen consumption (VO2max). Daily measures of the log-transformed root mean square of successive R-R intervals (lnRMSSD) were performed by the participants throughout week 1 and week 3 of the conditioning program. The mean and coefficient of variation (CV) lnRMSSD values of week 1 showed small (r=- 0.13, p=0.74) and moderate (r=0.57, p=0.11), respectively, non-significant correlations to the change in VO2max at the end of the conditioning program (鈭哣O2max). Significant and near-perfect correlation was found between the change in the weekly mean lnRMSSD values from weeks 1 and 3 (鈭唋nRMSSDM) and 鈭哣O2max (r=0.90, p=0.002). The current results have identified that the initial change in weekly mean lnRMSSD from weeks 1 to 3 of a conditioning protocol was strongly associated with the eventual adaptation of VO2max.