| Literature DB >> 29910323 |
Toby Edwards1, Tania Spiteri2,3, Benjamin Piggott4, Joshua Bonhotal5, G Gregory Haff6, Christopher Joyce7.
Abstract
The sport of basketball exposes athletes to frequent high intensity movements including sprinting, jumping, accelerations, decelerations and changes of direction during training and competition which can lead to acute and accumulated chronic fatigue. Fatigue may affect the ability of the athlete to perform over the course of a lengthy season. The ability of practitioners to quantify the workload and subsequent fatigue in basketball athletes in order to monitor and manage fatigue levels may be beneficial in maintaining high levels of performance and preventing unfavorable physical and physiological training adaptations. There is currently limited research quantifying training or competition workload outside of time motion analysis in basketball. In addition, systematic research investigating methods to monitor and manage athlete fatigue in basketball throughout a season is scarce. To effectively optimize and maintain peak training and playing performance throughout a basketball season, potential workload and fatigue monitoring strategies need to be discussed.Entities:
Keywords: countermovement jump; microtechnology; smallest worthwhile change; training load
Year: 2018 PMID: 29910323 PMCID: PMC5969183 DOI: 10.3390/sports6010019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4663
Figure 1Modulating factors of perceived and performance fatigability (Adapted from [11]).
Advantages and Disadvantages of Fatigue Monitoring Tools.
| Fatigue Monitoring Tool | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
|
Easy to administer Minimal additional fatigue Replicates common athletic movement performed in competition Easily implemented |
Lack of motivation to perform maximally No consensus as to which variable is most sensitive to fatigue Limited information regarding cause of performance reduction | |
|
No additional fatigue Can be completed on a daily basis Easy to administer |
Rely on subjective information Athletes can manipulate data | |
|
Replicates movement performed in competition Easily implemented Provides information even when athlete not in a fatigue state |
May add to existing fatigue Lack of motivation to perform maximally Limited information regarding cause of performance reduction | |
|
Most accessible physiological measure Ability to capture over short period of time |
Valid for short term (<2 weeks) overload only Limited evidence support use in team sports | |
|
Assist in understanding whether athlete is in a catabolic or anabolic state CK levels may help determine level of muscle damage |
High time, cost and expertise demand for data collection Time consuming analysis and feedback |
Example Monitoring System for a Basketball Training Camp [8].
| Monitoring Tool | Frequency | Purpose | Analysis Method | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Every court based session | Measure of external load |
Acute to chronic ratio |
Acute to chronic ratio ≥1.5 = increased risk of injury | |
| Every session | Measure of internal load |
Acute to chronic ratio |
Acute to chronic ratio ≥ 1.5 = increased risk of injury | |
| Daily | Measure of sleep quality, fatigue, soreness etc. |
Smallest meaningful change relative to reliability |
| |
| Daily | Measure of neuromuscular fatigue |
Smallest meaningful change relative to reliability |
If a variable decreases greater than the SWC | |
| Daily | Measure of ANS |
|
|
RHR = Resting Heart Rate; HRV = Heart Rate Variability; ANS = Autonomic Nervous System; S-RPE = Session Rating of Perceived Exertion; SWC = Smallest Worthwhile Change.