Sports Medicine and Health Science (Sep 2024)

Influence of biological maturation on cardiac autonomic recovery in female volleyball players during & after repeated sprints training: An experimental trial

  • Paulo Francisco de Almeida-Neto,
  • Fernanda Cristina Silva de Oliveira,
  • José Marcondes de Oliveira-Júnior,
  • Júlio César Medeiros Alves,
  • Matheus de Lima Rocha,
  • Iago Medeiros da Silva,
  • Roberto Felipe Câmara Rocha,
  • Paulo Moreira Silva Dantas,
  • Breno Guilherme de Araújo Tinôco Cabral

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 3
pp. 279 – 286

Abstract

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Previously, it was suggested that biological maturation (BM) could be linked to cardiac autonomic recovery (CAR) in the pediatric population. However, this influence hasn’t been confirmed yet. Our aim was to investigate the impact of BM on CAR in female volleyball players. Experimental study with a sample of 38 volleyball players, comprising 20 girls (age: [11.6 ​± ​2.1] years) and 18 women (age: [24.5 ​± ​5.5] years), we analyzed BM, comparing maturing subjects (girls) with mature subjects (women). Additionally, we assessed peak height velocity (PHV) in girls. We conducted a training session involving repeated sprints (3 rounds of 6 sprints interspersed by 5 ​min [min] of passive rest). Using short-range radio telemetry, we analyzed CAR during (at the end of the 1st and 2nd rounds) and after (following the 3rd round) the training session of repeated sprints by applying the 60-s to 300-s heart rate recovery index (HRR-Index). Girls exhibited superior CAR compared to women (round 2: 60-s, 120-s, 240-s, and 300-s, p ​ ​0.4, p ​ ​0.4, p ​< ​0.05). We have concluded that biological maturation has a significant impact on cardiac autonomic recovery.

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