Ice Slurry Ingestion Lowers Thermoregulatory Strain in Wheelchair Tennis Players During Repeated Sprint Intervals in the Heat

Author:

Stephenson Ben T.12,O’Brien Thomas J.13,Hutchinson Michael J.14,D’Angeli Christina1,Cockram Alex5,Mason Barry S.13,Goosey-Tolfrey Victoria L.1

Affiliation:

1. Peter Harrison Centre for Disability Sport, School of Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences, Loughborough University, Loughborough, United Kingdom

2. English Institute of Sport, Loughborough, United Kingdom

3. Great Britain Wheelchair Rugby, Twickenham, United Kingdom

4. British Paralympic Association, Loughborough, United Kingdom

5. Lawn Tennis Association, London, United Kingdom

Abstract

Purpose: To examine the efficacy of per-cooling via ice slurry ingestion (ICE) in wheelchair tennis players exercising in the heat. Method: Eight wheelchair tennis players undertook sprints (4 sets of 10 × 5 s over 40 min) in a hot environment (∼32 °C), interspersed by 3 boluses of 2.67 g·kg (6.8 g·kg total) ICE or drinking temperate water (control condition). Athletes performed an on-court test of repeated sprint ability (20 × 20 m) in temperate conditions immediately before and 20 minutes after the heat exposure, and time to complete each sprint as well as intermediate times were recorded. Gastrointestinal and weighted mean skin and forehead temperatures were collected throughout the heat exposure, as were thermal sensation, heart rate, and blood lactate concentration. Sweat rate was calculated from body mass changes and fluid/ice intakes. Results: Compared with the control condition, ICE resulted in a significantly lower gastrointestinal temperature (95% CI, 0.11–0.17 °C; P < .001), forehead temperature (0.58–1.06 °C; P < .001), thermal sensation (0.07–0.50 units; P = .017), and sweat rate (0.06–0.46 L·h−1; P = .017). Skin temperature, heart rate, and blood lactate concentration were not significantly different between conditions (P ≥ .598). There was no overall change preheating to postheating (P ≥ .114) or an effect of condition (P ≥ .251) on repeated sprint times. Conclusions: ICE is effective at lowering objective and subjective thermal strain when consumed between sets of repeated wheelchair sprints in the heat. However, ICE has no effect on on-court repeated 20-m sprint performance.

Publisher

Human Kinetics

Subject

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

Reference33 articles.

1. Wheelchair Tennis Classification,2016

2. Match analysis in a wheelchair tennis tournament;Sánchez-Pay A,2015

3. Prehospital management of exertional heat stroke at sports competitions for Paralympic athletes;Hosokawa Y,2022

4. Heat-related issues and practical applications for Paralympic athletes at Tokyo 2020;Griggs KE,2019

5. Attenuated skin blood flow response to hyperthermia in paraplegic men;Freund PR,1984

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