Somboonwong Juraiporn, Chutimakul Ladawan, Sanguanrungsirikul Sompol
1Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand; and 2Sports Medicine Program, Faculty of Medicine, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand.
J Strength Cond Res. 2015 Jan;29(1):262-9. doi: 10.1097/JSC.0000000000000235.
Warm-up session should be modified according to the environmental conditions. However, there is limited evidence regarding the proper soccer warm-up time for female players in the heat. The purpose of this study was to examine the rise in core body temperature and the sprint performance after a 15-minute warm-up in a hot-humid environment using female soccer players during the different phases of their menstrual cycle. Thirteen eumenorrheic national female soccer players (aged 18.8 ± 1.3 years, (Equation is included in full-text article.)53.05 ± 6.66 ml·kg·min) performed a 15-minute warm-up protocol at an ambient temperature of 32.5 ± 1.6° C with a relative humidity of 53.6 ± 10.2% during their early follicular and midluteal phases of their cycle. The warm-up protocol is composed of jogging, skipping by moving the legs in various directions, and sprinting alternated with jogging, followed by a 45-minute recovery period. Rectal temperatures were recorded during the rest period and every 5 minutes throughout the warm-up and recovery phases of the study. Heart rate was monitored at rest and every 5 minutes during the warm-up. Forty-yard sprint time was assessed immediately after the completion of warm-up, which was later compared with the time at baseline. The value for the baseline was obtained at least 2 days before the experiment. During the early follicular and midluteal phases, the rectal temperatures obtained at the end of the warm-up period were significantly (p < 0.05) higher by 1.26° C (95% confidence interval [CI] = +0.46 to +2.06° C) and 1.18° C (95% CI = +0.53 to +1.83° C), whereas the heart rates increased to 153.67 ± 20.34 and 158.38 ± 15.19 b·min, respectively. After 20 minutes of the recovery period, the rectal temperature decreased by approximately 50%. The sprint times were significantly (p < 0.05) faster post-warm-up during both the early follicular (5.52 seconds; 95% CI = 5.43-5.60 seconds) and midluteal phases (5.51 seconds; 95% CI = 5.41-5.60 seconds) compared with the baseline time (5.66 seconds; 95% CI = 5.58-5.74 seconds). There were no significant differences in any parameters assessed after warm-up between the 2 phases. In conclusion, a 15-minute warm-up increased the core temperature by approximately 1° C and improved the 40-yd sprint time for elite female soccer players in a hot environment regardless of menstrual phase.
热身环节应根据环境条件进行调整。然而,关于炎热环境下女性足球运动员合适的热身时间,相关证据有限。本研究的目的是,在炎热潮湿环境中,让女性足球运动员在月经周期的不同阶段进行15分钟的热身,以检测她们的核心体温上升情况和短跑表现。13名月经周期正常的国家女子足球运动员(年龄18.8±1.3岁,(公式包含在全文中)53.05±6.66毫升·千克·分钟)在其月经周期的卵泡期早期和黄体期中期,于环境温度32.5±1.6°C、相对湿度53.6±10.2%的条件下,进行了一次15分钟的热身方案。热身方案包括慢跑、向不同方向移动腿部跳绳、短跑与慢跑交替,随后是45分钟的恢复期。在休息期以及研究的热身和恢复期,每隔5分钟记录直肠温度。在休息时以及热身期间每隔5分钟监测心率。在热身结束后立即评估40码短跑时间,随后将其与基线时间进行比较。基线值在实验前至少2天测得。在卵泡期早期和黄体期中期,热身期结束时测得的直肠温度显著升高(p<0.05),分别升高了1.26°C(95%置信区间[CI]=+0.46至+2.06°C)和1.18°C(95%CI=+0.53至+1.83°C),而心率分别增加到153.67±20.34和158.38±15.19次·分钟。在恢复期20分钟后,直肠温度下降了约50%。与基线时间(5.66秒;95%CI=5.58至5.74秒)相比,在卵泡期早期(5.52秒;95%CI=5.43 - 5.60秒)和黄体期中期(5.51秒;95%CI=5.41 - 5.60秒),热身后的短跑时间均显著加快(p<0.05)。在两个阶段之间,热身后评估的任何参数均无显著差异。总之,对于精英女性足球运动员而言,在炎热环境中,15分钟的热身可使核心体温升高约1°C,并改善40码短跑时间,且与月经周期阶段无关。