Ultra-short-term lnRMSSD measurement showed high agreement with the standard 10-minute criterion in young female basketball players (ICC 0.93-0.95) and similar sensitivity to training effects.
Observational (n=17)
Does ultra-short-term HRV measurement agree with criterion HRV measurement in assessing adaptive processes in young female basketball players?
Ultra-short-term HRV (2 min acquisition) provides similar sensitivity to training effects as the standard 10-min criterion measure in young female athletes.
Estimación del efecto: ICC 0.93-0.95
Abstract Heart rate variability has been widely used to monitor athletes’ cardiac autonomic control changes induced by training and competition, and recently shorter recording times have been sought to improve its practicality. The aim of this study was to test the agreement between the (ultra-short-term) natural log of the root-mean-square difference of successive normal RR intervals (lnRMSSD - measured in only 1 min post-1 min stabilization) and the criterion lnRMSSD (measured in the last 5 min out of 10 min of recording) in young female basketball players. Furthermore, the correlation between training induced delta change in the ultra-short-term lnRMSSD and the criterion lnRMSSD was calculated. Seventeen players were assessed at rest pre- and post-eight weeks of training. Trivial effect sizes (-0.03 in the pre- and 0.10 in the post- treatment) were found in the comparison between the ultra-short-term lnRMSSD (3.29 ± 0.45 and 3.49 ± 0.35 ms, in the pre- and post-, respectively) and the criterion lnRMSSD (3.30 ± 0.40 and 3.45 ± 0.41 ms, in the pre- and post-, respectively) (intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.95 and 0.93). In both cases, the response to training was significant, with Pearson’s correlation of 0.82 between the delta changes of the ultra-short-term lnRMSSD and the criterion lnRMSSD. In conclusion, the lnRMSSD can be calculated within only 2 min of data acquisition (the 1 st min discarded) in young female basketball players, with the ultra-short-term measure presenting similar sensitivity to training effects as the standard criterion measure.
Nakamura et al. (Sat,) conducted a observational in Youth female basketball players (n=17). Ultra-short-term lnRMSSD (1 min post-1 min stabilization) vs. Criterion lnRMSSD (last 5 min of 10 min recording) was evaluated on Agreement between ultra-short-term and criterion lnRMSSD (ICC 0.93-0.95). Ultra-short-term lnRMSSD measurement showed high agreement with the standard 10-minute criterion in young female basketball players (ICC 0.93-0.95) and similar sensitivity to training effects.
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