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Swimmers affected by body clock
Circadian rhythms affect swimming performance
The swimmers stayed in the laboratory for 50-55 consecutive hours and followed a three-hour ‘ultra-short’ sleep/wake cycle, involving one hour of sleep in darkness and two hours of wakefulness in dim light, which was repeated throughout the test period. The purpose of this protocol was to distribute any behavioural and environmental masking factors equally across the 24-hour period (so that any differences that were observed would be due to circadian rhythm only).
The results revealed a very significant time of day effect on performance; swimming performance peaked from between five to seven hours before Tmin (approx 11pm), and was at its worst in the period from one hour before to one hour after Tmin (around 5am). The average increase in time from peak to worst performance was 5.8 seconds, or 3.5% difference (significant). This study provides yet more evidence that circadian rhythm can and does exert a significant impact on athletic performance, something that athletes and coaches need to be aware of when planning demanding training sessions or preparing for competitions.
J Appl Physiol 2007; 102(2):641-9
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