Sensitivity and reproducibility of a fatigue response in elite youth football players

Fitzpatrick, John, Akenhead, Richard, Russell, Mark, Hicks, Kirsty and Hayes, Phil (2019) Sensitivity and reproducibility of a fatigue response in elite youth football players. Science and Medicine in Football, 3 (3). pp. 214-220. ISSN 2473-3938

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Fitzpatrick et al - Sensitivity and reproducibility of a fatigue response in elite youth football players AAM.docx - Accepted Version

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1080/24733938.2019.1571685

Abstract

Objective: This study aimed to establish firstly, the sensitivity of subjective wellness, jump performance and triaxial accelerometer measures to training-induced fatigue and secondly, the reproducibility of this training-induced fatigue response.

Methods: In 14 elite youth football players, morning assessments of subjective wellness (fatigue, sleep quality, muscle soreness, stress and mood), jump performance (countermovement jump height [CMJ], squat jump height [SJ] and drop jump contact time [DJ-CT], height [DJ-JH] and reactive strength index [DJ-RSI]) and triaxial accelerometer data (PlayerLoadTM (PL), the individual movement planes of PL (anterior–posterior [PLAP], mediolateral [PLML] and vertical [PLV]) and the percentage contribution of each component plane) were collected before (−24 h and immediately prior) and after (+24 h, +48 h) a standardised strenuous training session on two occasions in order to assess the reproducibility of a training-induced fatigue response. Sensitivity was assessed via the signal: noise (S:N) ratio of the changes in fatigue measures +24 h post training and the minimum detectable change for each measure.

Results: DJ-RSI, PLML and %PLV were found to be sensitive measures of training-induced fatigue, which displayed a reproducible response (S:N > 1 on both occasions). CMJ, SJ and all subjective wellness measures were not able to detect a reproducible fatigue response.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: Fatigue, monitoring, accelerometer, soccer
Subjects: C600 Sports Science
Department: Faculties > Health and Life Sciences > Sport, Exercise and Rehabilitation
Depositing User: Paul Burns
Date Deposited: 01 Feb 2019 10:30
Last Modified: 29 Jan 2020 03:30
URI: http://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/id/eprint/37846

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