Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition (Dec 2023)

Pre-sleep feeding, sleep quality, and markers of recovery in division I NCAA female soccer players

  • Casey E. Greenwalt,
  • Elisa Angeles,
  • Matthew D. Vukovich,
  • Abbie E. Smith-Ryan,
  • Chris W. Bach,
  • Stacy T. Sims,
  • Tucker Zeleny,
  • Kristen E. Holmes,
  • David M. Presby,
  • Katie J. Schiltz,
  • Marine Dupuit,
  • Liliana I. Renteria,
  • Michael J. Ormsbee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/15502783.2023.2236055
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1

Abstract

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Pre-sleep nutrition habits in elite female athletes have yet to be evaluated. A retrospective analysis was performed with 14 NCAA Division I female soccer players who wore a WHOOP, Inc. band – a wearable device that quantifies recovery by measuring sleep, activity, and heart rate metrics through actigraphy and photoplethysmography, respectively – 24 h a day for an entire competitive season to measure sleep and recovery. Pre-sleep food consumption data were collected via surveys every 3 days. Average pre-sleep nutritional intake (mean ± sd: kcals 330 ± 284; cho 46.2 ± 40.5 g; pro 7.6 ± 7.3 g; fat 12 ± 10.5 g) was recorded. Macronutrients and kcals were grouped into high and low categories based upon the 50th percentile of the mean to compare the impact of a high versus low pre-sleep intake on sleep and recovery variables. Sleep duration (p = 0.10, 0.69, 0.16, 0.17) and sleep disturbances (p = 0.42, 0.65, 0.81, 0.81) were not affected by high versus low kcal, PRO, fat, CHO intake, respectively. Recovery (p = 0.81, 0.06, 0.81, 0.92), RHR (p = 0.84, 0.64, 0.26, 0.66), or HRV (p = 0.84, 0.70, 0.76, 0.93) were also not affected by high versus low kcal, PRO, fat, or CHO consumption, respectively. Consuming a small meal before bed may have no impact on sleep or recovery.

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