PublicadoEl 23/11/22 por Comillas
Artículo

Influence of successive badminton matches on muscle strength, powe, and body fluid balance in elite players.

tipo de documento semantico ckh_publication

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Influence of successive badminton matches on muscle strength, power, and body fluid balance in elite players..pdf
Tamaño 5031748
Formato Adobe PDF
Fecha de publicación 01/05/2014
Autor
Abian Vicen, Javier
Castanedo, Adrian
Abian Vicen, Pablo
González Millán, Cristina
Salinero, Juan José
Del Coso, Juan
Fuente Revista: International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance, Periodo: 4, Volumen: 9, Número: 4, Página inicial: 689, Página final: 694
Estado info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

Resumen

Idioma es-ES
Resumen

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Idioma en-GB
Resumen

The aim was to analyze the influence of competitive round on muscle strength, body-fluid balance, and renal function in elite badminton players during a real competition. Body mass, jump height during a countermovement jump, handgrip force, and urine samples were obtained from 13 elite badminton players (6 men and 7 women) before and after the 2nd-round and quarterfinal matches of the national Spanish badminton championship. Sweat rate was determined by using prematch-to-postmatch body-mass change and by weighing individually labeled fluid bottles. Sweat rates were 1.04 ± 0.62 and 0.98 ± 0.43 L/h, while rehydration rate was 0.69 ± 0.26 and 0.91 ± 0.52 L/h for the 2nd round and quarterfinals, respectively. Thus, dehydration was 0.47% ± 1.03% after the 2nd round and 0.23% ± 0.43% after the quarterfinals. There were no differences in prematch-to-postmatch jump height, but jump height was reduced from 37.51 ± 8.83 cm after the 2nd-round game to 34.82 ± 7.37 cm after the quarterfinals (P < .05). No significant differences were found in handgrip force when comparing prepost matches or rounds, although there were significant differences between dominant and nondominant hands (P < .05). The succession of rounds caused the appearance of proteinuria, hematuria, glycosuria, and higher nitrite and ketone concentrations in urine. Rehydration patterns during a real badminton competition were effective to prevent dehydration. A badminton match did not affect jump height or handgrip force, but jump height was progressively reduced by the competitive round. Badminton players renal responses reflected diminished renal flux due to the high-intensity nature of this racket sport.

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Tipo de archivo application/pdf
Idioma en-GB
Tipo de acceso info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
Fecha de modificacion 12/12/2016
Fecha de disponibilidad 03/11/2016
fecha de alta 03/11/2016

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