Psychophysiological Effects of Slow-Paced Breathing on Adolescent Swimmers' Subjective Performance, Recovery States, and Control Perception.

SPB-NoHRVB adolescent athletes breathing recovery stress subjective training performance

Journal

Journal of functional morphology and kinesiology
ISSN: 2411-5142
Titre abrégé: J Funct Morphol Kinesiol
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101712257

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
25 Jan 2024
Historique:
received: 15 11 2023
revised: 09 01 2024
accepted: 19 01 2024
medline: 23 2 2024
pubmed: 23 2 2024
entrez: 23 2 2024
Statut: epublish

Résumé

This study examined the effect of a Slow-Paced Breath (i.e., 6 breaths per minute) without Biofeedback (SPB-NoHRVB) protocol on semi-elite adolescent swimmers' psychological and physiological states during a seven-week ecological training period. A linear mixed-effects multilevel regression analysis approach was used with 13 adolescent national-level swimmers. Athletes were randomly assigned to an intervention group (n = 7) and a control group (n = 6). Seven waves of assessments were completed weekly during a seven-week training preparation in ecological conditions. During the protocol, swimmers completed subjective quantitative measures (RESTQ-36-R-Sport; cognitive perceived stress and control states about the training process, training subjective performance, and subjective internal training load) and physiological heart rate (HR) (HR of exercise, absolute and normalized HR recovery during the first 60 s of recovery; HRR60 and nHRR60) and heart rate variability (HRV) (MeanRR, RMSSD, LFnu and HFnu, LF/HF ration) tests (through a submaximal heart rate (5'-5' test) once a week. Results revealed that the SPB-NoHRVB protocol significantly predicts biopsychosocial recovery states, cognitive perception of control, and training subjective performance (i.e., a significant effect of the SPB-NoHRVB protocol with the dependent variables simple time trajectories). However, no significant effects were found for biopsychosocial stress scales, cognitively perceived stress, HR, or HRV markers. Our results suggest that SPB-NoHRVB induces simple evolutions over time for crucial variables in athletes' adaptation to the training process (i.e., cognitive appraisals and biopsychosocial states). In contrast, it highlights that SPB-NoHRVB does not induce better stress states. This specific effect on the resource component is an exciting result that will be discussed in the manuscript.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38390923
pii: jfmk9010023
doi: 10.3390/jfmk9010023
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Auteurs

Quentin Merlin (Q)

Laboratory Psy-DREPI (EA 7458), University of Bourgogne Franche-Comté, 21000 Dijon, France.

Philippe Vacher (P)

Research Center for Education Learning and Didactics (EA 3875), Faculty of Sports Science, University Brest, 29200 Brest, France.
Maison des Sciences de l'Homme de Bretagne, Fe, MSHB, 35043 Rennes, France.

Laurent Mourot (L)

SINERGIES, Université de Franche-Comté, 25000 Besançon, France.
Plateforme Exercice Performance Santé Innovation, Université de Franche-Comté, 25000 Besançon, France.

Guillaume Levillain (G)

Research Center for Education Learning and Didactics (EA 3875), Faculty of Sports Science, University Brest, 29200 Brest, France.

Guillaume Martinent (G)

Laboratory L-VIS (EA 7428), University of Claude Bernard Lyon 1, 69200 Lyon, France.

Michel Nicolas (M)

Laboratory Psy-DREPI (EA 7458), University of Bourgogne Franche-Comté, 21000 Dijon, France.

Classifications MeSH