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      Acute Performance, Daily Well-Being, and Hormone Responses to Water Immersion After Resistance Exercise in Junior International and Subelite Male Volleyball Athletes

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          Abstract

          Horgan, BG, Tee, N, West, NP, Drinkwater, EJ, Halson, SL, Colomer, CME, Fonda, CJ, Tatham, J, Chapman, DW, and Haff, GG. Acute performance, daily well-being and hormone responses to water immersion after resistance exercise in junior international and subelite male volleyball athletes. J Strength Cond Res 37(8): 1643–1653, 2023—Athletes use postexercise hydrotherapy strategies to improve recovery and competition performance and to enhance adaptative responses to training. Using a randomized cross-over design, the acute effects of 3 postresistance exercise water immersion strategies on perceived recovery, neuromuscular performance, and hormone concentrations in junior international and subelite male volleyball athletes ( n = 18) were investigated. After resistance exercise, subjects randomly completed either 15-minute passive control (CON), contrast water therapy (CWT), cold (CWI), or hot water immersion (HWI) interventions. A treatment effect occurred after HWI; reducing perceptions of fatigue (HWI > CWT: p = 0.05, g = 0.43); improved sleep quality, compared with CON ( p < 0.001, g = 1.15), CWI ( p = 0.017, g = 0.70), and CWT ( p = 0.018, g = 0.51); as well as increasing testosterone concentration (HWI > CWT: p = 0.038, g = 0.24). There were trivial to small ( p < 0.001–0.039, g = 0.02–0.34) improvements (treatment effect) in jump performance (i.e., squat jump and countermovement jump) after all water immersion strategies, as compared with CON, with high variability in the individual responses. There were no significant differences (interaction effect, p > 0.05) observed between the water immersion intervention strategies and CON in performance ( p = 0.153–0.99), hormone ( p = 0.207–0.938), nor perceptual ( p = 0.368–0.955) measures. To optimize recovery and performance responses, e.g., during an in-season competition phase, postresistance exercise HWI may assist with providing small-to-large improvements for up to 38 hours in perceived recovery (i.e., increased sleep quality and reduced fatigue) and increases in circulating testosterone concentration. Practitioners should consider individual athlete neuromuscular performance responses when prescribing postexercise hydrotherapy. These findings apply to athletes who aim to improve their recovery status, where postresistance exercise HWI optimizes sleep quality and next-day perceptions of fatigue.

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          Most cited references58

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          A Guideline of Selecting and Reporting Intraclass Correlation Coefficients for Reliability Research.

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              Post-exercise cold water immersion attenuates acute anabolic signalling and long-term adaptations in muscle to strength training.

              We investigated functional, morphological and molecular adaptations to strength training exercise and cold water immersion (CWI) through two separate studies. In one study, 21 physically active men strength trained for 12 weeks (2 days per week), with either 10 min of CWI or active recovery (ACT) after each training session. Strength and muscle mass increased more in the ACT group than in the CWI group (P < 0.05). Isokinetic work (19%), type II muscle fibre cross-sectional area (17%) and the number of myonuclei per fibre (26%) increased in the ACT group (all P < 0.05), but not the CWI group. In another study, nine active men performed a bout of single-leg strength exercises on separate days, followed by CWI or ACT. Muscle biopsies were collected before and 2, 24 and 48 h after exercise. The number of satellite cells expressing neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) (10-30%) and paired box protein (Pax7) (20-50%) increased 24-48 h after exercise with ACT. The number of NCAM(+) satellite cells increased 48 h after exercise with CWI. NCAM(+) - and Pax7(+) -positive satellite cell numbers were greater after ACT than after CWI (P < 0.05). Phosphorylation of p70S6 kinase(Thr421/Ser424) increased after exercise in both conditions but was greater after ACT (P < 0.05). These data suggest that CWI attenuates the acute changes in satellite cell numbers and activity of kinases that regulate muscle hypertrophy, which may translate to smaller long-term training gains in muscle strength and hypertrophy. The use of CWI as a regular post-exercise recovery strategy should be reconsidered.
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                Author and article information

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                Journal
                Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research
                Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
                1064-8011
                2023
                August 2023
                April 12 2023
                : 37
                : 8
                : 1643-1653
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Australian Institute of Sport, Bruce, Australian Capital Territory, Australia;
                [2 ]School of Medical and Health Sciences, Edith Cowan University, Joondalup, Western Australia, Australia;
                [3 ]Brumbies Rugby, Bruce, Australian Capital Territory, Australia;
                [4 ]Australian Catholic University, Watson, Australian Capital Territory, Australia;
                [5 ]School of Medical Science and Menzies Health Institute QLD, Griffith University, Queensland, Australia;
                [6 ]Center for Sport Research, School of Exercise & Nutrition Sciences, Deakin University, Geelong, Victoria, Australia;
                [7 ]Australian Catholic University, McAuley at Banyo, Queensland, Australia;
                [8 ]Volleyball Australia, Australian Institute of Sport, Bruce, Australian Capital Territory, Australia;
                [9 ]Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia, Australia; and
                [10 ]Directorate of Psychology and Sport, University of Salford, Salford, Greater Manchester, United Kingdom
                Article
                10.1519/JSC.0000000000004428
                60a879e7-e81a-4c7a-8933-ad2da6958325
                © 2023
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