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Effects of dynamic apnea training on diving bradycardia and short distance swimming performance
Mid Sweden University, Faculty of Human Sciences, Department of Health Sciences (HOV).
Mid Sweden University, Faculty of Human Sciences, Department of Health Sciences (HOV).
Mid Sweden University, Faculty of Human Sciences, Department of Health Sciences (HOV). (Winter Sports Research Centre)
2022 (English)In: Journal of Sports Medicine and Physical Fitness, ISSN 0022-4707, E-ISSN 1827-1928, Vol. 62, no 8, p. 1037-1044Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

BACKGROUND: Apnea training enhances bradycardia and improves competitive apnea performance, and has been proposed as a training method for other sports, such as swimming. We evaluated the effects of apneic underwater swimming, i.e. dynamic apnea (DYN), in 9 competitive swimmers (TR) who completed ten DYN sessions over 2 weeks.

METHODS: TR performed pre- and post-training tests including a static apnea test with continuous heart rate (HR) and peripheral oxygen saturation measurements, all-out 50m and 100m freestyle tests and an all-out DYN test. Control groups were competitive swimmers (SC; n=10) that trained swimming without DYN, and a non-swimmer group (AC; n=10) performing only static apnea tests.

RESULTS: Post-training, TR mean±SD time for 50m freestyle improved from 25.51±2.01s to 24.64±2.02s (p<0.01) and for 100m from 55.5±4.2s to 54.1±4.4s (p<0.05). SC also improved their 100m time from 56.7±3.3s to 56.0±3.1s (p<0.01; p=0.07 between groups). Only TR performed DYN tests; DYN distance increased from 62.1±11.5m to 70.9±18.9m (p<0.05) while DYN speed decreased from 0.74±0.14m/s to 0.64±0.18m/s (p<0.01). Static apnea duration did not change in any of the groups, but HR-reduction was enhanced posttraining only in TR (24.8±14.8% to 31.1±10.9%, p<0.01; p<0.001 between groups).

CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that 2 weeks of DYN training enhanced DYN performance, which may be caused by the enhanced apnea-induced diving bradycardia. Further research is required to determine whether DYN training enhances short distance freestyle swimming performance.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
2022. Vol. 62, no 8, p. 1037-1044
Keywords [en]
Breath-holding, Cardiovascular diving response, Hypoxia, Front crawl, Freediving
National Category
Sport and Fitness Sciences
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:miun:diva-44938DOI: 10.23736/s0022-4707.21.12549-6ISI: 000835203600004PubMedID: 34546023Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85122135121OAI: oai:DiVA.org:miun-44938DiVA, id: diva2:1656461
Available from: 2022-05-06 Created: 2022-05-06 Last updated: 2022-08-18Bibliographically approved

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Mulder, EricHolmström, PontusSchagatay, Erika

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