| Literature DB >> 29879146 |
Jorge Castizo-Olier1,2, Alfredo Irurtia1,2, Monèm Jemni3, Marta Carrasco-Marginet1,2, Raúl Fernández-García4, Ferran A Rodríguez1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bioelectrical impedance vector analysis (BIVA) is a general concept that includes all methodologies used in the analysis of the bioelectrical vector, whereas the "classic" BIVA is a patented methodology included among these methods of analysis. Once this was clarified, the systematic review of the literature provides a deeper insight into the scope and range of application of BIVA in sport and exercise.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29879146 PMCID: PMC5991700 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0197957
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flow chart of study identification and eligibility for the systematic review.
BIVA studies analysing short-term changes (<24 hours) in the hydration status induced by exercise and training.
| Study | Publication | Aim | Design | Methodology | n | Sex | Age | Sport/Exercise | Level | BIA device | Electrode distribution | Vector/BIA differences (Yes / No) | Comparative technique |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gatterer et al. 2014 [ | Original article | To analyse bioelectrical changes induced by exercise under heat stress (environmental chamber) with hydration biomarkers | Short-term vector changes (1 h of exercise) | Analysis of intra-individual and intra-group differences. | 14 | M | 24.1±1.7 | Self-rated intensity (Borg Scale) cycle ergometer test | Well trained subjects | BIA 101 ASE, | Whole-body | Yes | Directional changes in vector values towards the upper pole of the ellipses occurred along with BM and plasma osmolality changes after exercise |
| Antoni et al. 2017 [ | Original article | To analyse bioelectrical changes induced by a subterranean exploration | Short-term vector changes (~10 h of physical activity) | Analysis of intra-group and inter-group differences. | 40 | F, M | 44.0±19 | Caving | Beginners, amateurs and experts | BIA 101 ASE, | Whole-body | Yes (Xc and PA, only in men) | Directional changes in vector values towards the upper pole of the ellipses occurred along with a significant increase in BM in the group of men |
| Carrasco-Marginet et al. 2017 [ | Original article | To analyse bioelectrical changes induced by a synchronised swimming training | Short-term vector changes (~2.5–3.5 h of exercise) | Analysis of intra-group and inter-group differences. | 49 | F | Pre-junior (n = 34): 13.9±0.9 | Synchronised swimming | Elite | Z-Metrix, | Whole-body | Yes | Directional changes in vector values towards the upper pole of the ellipses and significant mean vector differences occurred along with BM changes after exercise |
M: males; F: females; P-S: phase-sensitive device; BIA: bioelectrical impedance analysis; BIVA: bioelectrical impedance vector analysis; Xc: reactance; h: height; BM: body mass
* Significance level: p<0.05
BIVA studies analysing bioelectrical changes induced by injury.
| Study | Publication | Aim | Design | Methodology | N | Sex | Age | Sport/Exercise | Level | BIA device | Electrode distribution | Vector/BIA differences (Yes / No) | Comparative technique |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nescolarde et al. 2011 [ | Scientific congress communication | To analyse whole-body and localised bioelectrical differences between two sports, and to assess muscle injuries | Single measure | Inter-group analysis. | 14 | M | >18.0 | Soccer (n = 10) | Professional | BIA-101, | Whole-body and | Yes | Localised BIA was sensitive to different types of injury diagnosed by magnetic resonance imaging |
| Nescolarde et al. 2013 [ | Original article | To analyse bioelectrical changes induced by injury and its recovery | Long-term bioelectrical changes (9 to 75 days) | Analysis of intra-individual differences (injury identification and follow-up) | 3 | M | 22.0±3.6 | Soccer | Professional | BIA-101, | Localised | Yes | Localised BIA was consistent with reference magnetic resonance imaging diagnoses with differing levels of injury severity |
M: males; P-S: phase-sensitive device; BIA: bioelectrical impedance analysis; BIVA: bioelectrical impedance vector analysis
* Significance level: p<0.05
Baseline bioelectrical parameters and vector position of the participants analysed in the studies included in the present review.
| Study | BMI (kg/m2) | R/h (Ω/m) | Xc/h (Ω/m) | PA (º) | Vector position on the BIVA point graph | Other comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nescolarde et al. 2011 [ | Soccer: 23.2±1.5 | Soccer: 268.9±22.4 | Soccer: 37.4±3.8 | Soccer: 7.9±0.7 | Soccer: The mean vector was plotted inside the “athlete” quadrant of the reference population, outside the range of normal hydration | |
| Nescolarde et al. 2013 [ | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | |
| Micheli et al. 2014 [ | All: 23.3±1.6 | All: 263.9±26.2 | All: 33.8±3.9 | All: 7.3±0.6 | The individual vectors were scattered in both “athlete” and “obese” quadrants of the reference population, outside and inside the range of normal hydration | Some individual vectors were plotted inside the “lean” quadrant of the reference population, outside and inside the range of normal hydration |
| Piccoli et al. 2007 [ | BB: 28.9±3.6 | BB: NR | BB: NR | BB: 8.6±1.1 | The mean vector was plotted in the limit of the 95% ellipse of the “obese” quadrant of the reference population, outside the range of normal hydration | |
| Koury et al. 2014 [ | Adolescent: 20.2±3.0 | Adolescent: 302.0±71.0 | Adolescent: 36.2±6.7 | Adolescent: 6.9±0.9 | Adolescent: The majority of the individual vectors were scattered inside the “obese” quadrant of the reference population, either when all the participants were plotted and when the comparison was performed according to paired sport modalities. Most of them were plotted outside the range of normal hydration | |
| Bonuccelli et al. 2011 [ | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | |
| Bonuccelli et al. 2012 [ | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | |
| Gatterer et al. 2011 [ | S: 23.5±0.9 | NR | NR | NR | The mean vectors of both groups were plotted inside the “obese” quadrant of the reference population, close to the “athlete” one, outside the range of normal hydration | |
| Gatterer et al. 2014 [ | NR | 284.1±23.0 | 37.5±3.3 | NR | Mean and individual vectors were plotted inside the “athlete” quadrant of the reference population, the majority of them outside the range of normal hydration | Only one individual vector was plotted inside the “obese” quadrant of the reference population, close to the “athlete” area, outside the range of normal hydration |
| Mascherini et al. 2014 [ | NR | 272.7±24.9 | 36.0±4.0 | 7.5±0.5 | The mean vector was plotted inside the “lean” quadrant of the reference population, within the range of normal hydration | |
| Piccoli et al. 1996 [ | 22.9 (21.8–25.6) | 256.5 | 31.2 | NR | The mean vector was plotted inside the “obese” quadrant of the reference population, in the limit of the range of normal hydration | The article shows two examples of individual vectors, one plotted inside the “athlete” quadrant of the reference population (outside the range of normal hydration) and the other inside the “obese” one (within the range of normal hydration) |
| Reljic et al. 2013 [ | NR | NR | NR | NR | The mean vectors of both groups were plotted inside the “athlete” quadrant of the reference population, within the range of normal hydration | |
| Antoni et al. 2017 [ | F: 21.8±2.1 | F: 388.6±34.1 | F: 33.7± 3.2 | F: 8.7± 0.8 | F: The mean vector of women was plotted between the “cachexic” and the “lean” quadrants of the reference population, close to the left ones, within the range of normal hydration | |
| Carrasco-Marginet et al. 2017 [ | Co: 18.0±1.9 | Co: 328.4±38.8 | Co: 40.0±4.5 | Co: 7.0±0.5 | Co: The majority of the individual vectors were plotted outside and inside the 95% tolerance ellipse of the “obese” quadrant of the reference population, outside the range of normal hydration | Some of the Co individual vectors were plotted inside the “athlete” quadrant of the reference population, most of them outside the range of normal hydration |
| Fukuda et al. 2016 [ | 24.5±3.0 | 376.9±45.4 | 31.6±5.5 | 4.8±0.6 | NR | |
| Meleleo et al. 2017 [ | F: 17.68 | F: 465.6±13.7 | F: 46.8±1.6 | F: 5.8± 0.1 | NR | |
| Mascherini et al. 2015 [ | 23.3±1.5 | 259.8±27.0 | 35.5±3.5 | 7.8±0.6 | The mean vector was plotted inside the “athlete” quadrant of the reference population, outside the range of normal hydration | |
| Pollastri et al. 2016 [ | NR | NR | NR | NR | NR | |
| Pollastri et al. 2016 [ | NR | NR | NR | NR | Mean and individual vectors were plotted inside the “athlete” quadrant of the reference population, outside the range of normal hydration |
BMI: body mass index; R: resistance; Xc: reactance; h: height; PA: phase angle; BIVA: bioelectrical impedance vector analysis; NR: not reported; BB: bodybuilders; S: starters; NS: non-starters; Co: pre-junior; Jr: junior; F: females; M: males
BIVA studies analysing long-term (≥7 days) changes in body composition induced by exercise and training.
| Study | Publication | Aim | Design | Methodology | N | Sex | Age | Sport/Exercise | Level | BIA device | Electrode distribution | Vector/BIA differences (Yes / No) | Comparative technique |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Piccoli et al. 1996 [ | Original article | To analyse bioelectrical changes induced by a high altitude climbing expedition | Long-term vector changes (~12 weeks) | Analysis of intra-individual and intra-group differences. | 7 | M | 25 (22–28) | Climbing | Healthy subjects | BIA-101, | Whole-body | Yes | Bioelectrical changes correlated with changes in BM and hydration biomarkers |
| Gatterer et al. 2011 [ | Original article | To analyse bioelectrical changes induced by two soccer matches | Long-term vector changes (~1–2 weeks) | Analysis of intra-group differences. | 14 | M | Starters (n = 7): 24.3±3.0 | Soccer | Elite | BIA 2000-M, | Whole-body | Yes | Significant vector displacement along with BM changes were observed in the starters group between the first and the second match |
| Bonuccelli et al. 2011 [ | Scientific congress communication | To analyse bioelectrical changes induced by a soccer season | Long-term vector changes (whole season) | Analysis of intra-group differences | 18 | M | 27.6±4.9 | Soccer | Elite | BIA-101, | Whole-body | Yes | No comparative technique was reported |
| Bonuccelli et al. 2012 [ | Scientific congress communication | To analyse bioelectrical and DXA changes induced by a soccer season | Long-term vector changes (whole season) | Analysis of intra-group differences | 10 | M | 26.7±3.0 | Soccer | Elite | BIA-101, | Whole-body | Yes | BIVA was sensitive to body composition changes (identified by DXA) through a soccer season |
| Reljic et al. 2013 [ | Original article | To analyse bioelectrical changes with hydration biomarkers | Long-term vector changes (unspecified duration) | Analysis of intra-group differences. | 17 | M | Weight-loss group (n = 10): 19.7±3.2 | Boxing | Elite | BIA-101, | Whole-body | Yes | Directional changes in vector values towards the upper pole of the ellipses occurred along with significant changes in BM and blood parameters within few days before competition |
| Mascherini et al. 2014 [ | Original article | To analyse bioelectrical changes induced by a soccer season | Long-term vector changes (whole season) | Analysis of intra-group differences. | 18 | M | 21.8±3.0 | Soccer | Professional | BIA-101 ASE, | Whole-body | Yes | Changes in the vector length correlated with changes in the endurance performance |
| Mascherini et al. 2015 [ | Original article | To analyse bioelectrical changes induced by a soccer training program | Long-term bioelectrical changes (50 days) | Analysis of intra-group differences. | 59 | M | 22.5±5.6 | Soccer | Elite | BIA-101 ASE, | Whole-body and | Yes | Bioelectrical differences in the whole-body and localised assessments were found along with some anthropometric measures changes after 50 days of training |
| Fukuda et al. 2016 [ | Original article | To analyse bioelectrical changes induced by a resistance training program | Long-term vector changes (6 months) | Analysis of intra-group differences | 20 | F | 71.9±6.9 | Full-body resistance training program | Healthy, ambulatory subjects | Quantum II, | Whole-body | Yes | Significant training effects were found for PA after the training program. No relationship was observed between changes in strength and BIA after 6 months. |
| Pollastri et al. 2016 [ | Original article | To analyse bioelectrical changes induced by a multistage road bicycle race (Giro d'Italia 2014) | Long-term vector changes (3 weeks) | Analysis of intra-group differences. | 9 | M | 28.2±4.7 | Cycling | Professional | BIA-101 ASE, | Whole-body | Yes | BIA vector changes were not related to power output or RPE |
| Pollastri et al. 2016 [ | Original article | To analyse bioelectrical changes induced by a multistage road bicycle race (Giro d'Italia 2014) | Long-term vector changes (3 weeks) | Analysis of intra-group differences | 8 | M | 28.8±4.7 | Cycling | Elite | BIA-101 ASE, | Whole-body | Yes | BIA vector changes correlated with maximal mean power of different time durations depending on the stage |
| Meleleo et al. 2017 [ | Original article | To analyse bioelectrical changes induced by daily competitive sport | Long-term vector changes (1 year) | Analysis of intra-group and inter-group differences | 219 | F, M | Non-athletic group: 9.3 (8.2–10.5) | Swimming | Healthy subjects | BIA-101 ASE, | Whole-body | Yes | Bioelectrical differences were found along with a lack of difference in BMI between groups |
M: males; F: females; P-S: phase-sensitive device; BIA: bioelectrical impedance analysis; BIVA: bioelectrical impedance vector analysis; DXA: dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry; R: resistance; Xc: reactance; PA: phase angle; h: height; BM: body mass; RPE: rating of perceived exertion; BMI: body mass index
* Significance level: p<0.05
BIVA studies analysing bioelectrical differences between populations.
| Study | Publication | Aim | Design | Methodology | N | Sex | Age | Sport/Exercise | Level | BIA device | Electrode distribution | Vector/BIA differences (Yes / No) | Comparative technique |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Piccoli et al. 2007 [ | Original article | To assess the equivalence of information between BIA (50 kHz) and BIS in two different groups | Single measure | Inter-group analysis. | 60 | M | Bodybuilders (n = 30): 32.1±5.7 | Bodybuilding | Professional | SEAC SFB3, | Whole-body | Yes | R and Xc (50 kHz) correlated with other frequencies. |
| Micheli et al. 2014 [ | Original article | To assess BIVA in soccer players and establish new specific tolerance ellipses | Single measure | Inter-group analysis. | 893 | M | 24.1±5.1 | Soccer | Elite and professional | BIA-101, | Whole-body | Yes | Elite and high-level soccer players registered significant bioelectrical and BM differences compared with lower performance levels |
| Koury et al. 2014 [ | Original article | To assess BIVA in adolescent and adult athletes | Single measure | Inter-group analysis. | 195 | M | Adolescents (n = 105): 15.1±2.1 Adults (n = 90): | Athletics (n = 25) | Elite | Quantum BIA-101Q, | Whole-body | Yes | PA correlated with BM and age |
M: males; F: females; P-S: phase-sensitive device; BIA: bioelectrical impedance analysis; BIVA: bioelectrical impedance vector analysis; BIS: bioelectrical impedance spectroscopy; R: resistance; Xc: reactance; PA: phase angle; BM: body mass; TBW: total body water
* Significance level: p<0.05