Hematological Adaptations Following a Training Camp in Hot and/or Hypoxic Conditions in Elite Rugby Union Players

Author:

Périard Julien D.12ORCID,Girard Olivier23ORCID,Townsend Nathan24ORCID,Bourdon Pitre56ORCID,Cocking Scott25ORCID,Ihsan Mohammed2ORCID,Lacome Mathieu78,Nichols David2,Travers Gavin29ORCID,Wilson Mathew G.210ORCID,Piscione Julien7,Racinais Sebastien27ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research Institute for Sport and Exercise, University of Canberra, Canberra, ACT, Australia

2. Department of Research and Scientific Support, Aspetar Orthopedic and Sports Medicine Hospital, Doha, Qatar

3. School of Human Sciences (Exercise and Sport Science), University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA, Australia

4. College of Health and Life Sciences, Hamad Bin Khalifa University, Doha, Qatar

5. Department of Sport Science, ASPIRE, Academy for Sports Excellence, Doha, Qatar

6. Alliance for Research in Exercise, Nutrition and Activity (ARENA), University of South Australia, Adelaide, SA, Australia

7. Department of Research, Sport Laboratory, Expertise and Performance, French Institute of Sports (INSEP), Paris, France

8. Department of Performance and Analytics, Parma Calcio, Parma, Italy

9. Space Medicine Team, European Astronaut Center, Köln, Germany

10. Institute of Sport, Exercise and Health, University College London, London, United Kingdom

Abstract

Purpose: To investigate the effects of a training camp with heat and/or hypoxia sessions on hematological and thermoregulatory adaptations. Methods: Fifty-six elite male rugby players completed a 2-week training camp with 5 endurance and 5 repeated-sprint sessions, rugby practice, and resistance training. Players were separated into 4 groups: CAMP trained in temperate conditions at sea level, HEAT performed the endurance sessions in the heat, ALTI slept and performed the repeated sprints at altitude, and H + A was a combination of the heat and altitude groups. Results: Blood volume across all groups increased by 140 mL (95%CI, 42–237; P = .006) and plasma volume by 97 mL (95%CI 28–167; P = .007) following the training camp. Plasma volume was 6.3% (0.3% to 12.4%) higher in HEAT than ALTI (P = .034) and slightly higher in HEAT than H + A (5.6% [−0.3% to 11.7%]; P = .076). Changes in hemoglobin mass were not significant (P = .176), despite a ∼1.2% increase in ALTI and H + A and a ∼0.7% decrease in CAMP and HEAT. Peak rectal temperature was lower during a postcamp heat-response test in HEAT (0.3 °C [0.1–0.5]; P = .010) and H + A (0.3 °C [0.1–0.6]; P = .005). Oxygen saturation upon waking was lower in ALTI (3% [2% to 5%]; P < .001) and H + A (4% [3% to 6%]; P < .001) than CAMP and HEAT. Conclusion: Although blood and plasma volume increased following the camp, sleeping at altitude impeded the increase when training in the heat and only marginally increased hemoglobin mass. Heat training induced adaptations commensurate with partial heat acclimation; however, combining heat training and altitude training and confinement during a training camp did not confer concomitant hematological adaptations.

Publisher

Human Kinetics

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation

Reference47 articles.

1. Special environments: altitude and heat;Saunders PU,2019

2. Exercise under heat stress: thermoregulation, hydration, performance implications and mitigation strategies;Périard JD,2021

3. Endurance training at altitude;Saunders PU,2009

4. Nonhematological mechanisms of improved sea-level performance after hypoxic exposure;Gore CJ,2007

5. Impaired heat adaptation from combined heat training and live high-train low hypoxia;McCleave EL,2019

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