Physiological and psychological determinants of whole-body endurance exercise following short-term sustained operations with partial sleep deprivation

短期持续手术伴部分睡眠剥夺后全身耐力运动的生理和心理决定因素

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Abstract

PURPOSE: The study examined the effects of short-term field-based military training with partial sleep deprivation on whole-body endurance performance in well-trained individuals. METHODS: Before and after a 2-day sustained operations (SUSOPS), 14 cadets performed a 15-min constant-load cycling at 65% of peak power output (PPO; CLT(65)), followed by an exhaustive constant-load trial at 85% of PPO (CLT(85)). Physiological [oxygen uptake ([Formula: see text]O(2)), heart rate (HR), mean arterial pressure (MAP), cardiac output (CO), and regional oxygenation (TOI) in the frontal cerebral cortex and vastus lateralis muscle] and psychological [effort perception (RPE), affective valence (FS), and perceived activation (FAS)] variables were monitored during exercise. RESULTS: SUSOPS reduced time to exhaustion in CLT(85) by 29.1% (p = 0.01). During the CLT(65) trial, SUSOPS potentiated the exercise-induced elevations in [Formula: see text]O(2) and HR (p < 0.05), and blunted MAP (p = 0.001). CO did not differ between trials. Yet, towards the end of both CLT(85) trials, CO tended to decline (p ≤ 0.08); a response that occurred at an earlier stage in the SUSOPS trial. During CLT(65), SUSOPS altered neither cerebral nor muscle TOI. The SUSOPS CLT(85) trial, however, was terminated at similar leg-muscle deoxygenation (p > 0.05) and lower prefrontal cortex deoxygenation (p < 0.01). SUSOPS increased RPE at submaximal intensities (p = 0.05), and suppressed FAS and FS throughout (p < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: The present findings indicate, therefore, that a brief period of military sustained operations with partial sleep deprivation augment cardiorespiratory and psychological strain, limiting high-intensity endurance capacity.

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