Abstract

Can analysis of performance and neuromuscular recoveries from repeated sprints shed more light on its fatigue-causing mechanisms?

Highlights

  • In team sports, game decisive events are often reliant on transient repeated-sprint ability (RSA), which refers to the ability to produce the best possible average sprint performance over a series of sprints (

  • The consistent finding was that acute moderate hypoxia or the induction of pre-existing locomotor muscle fatigue caused significant parallel reductions in Root Mean Square (RMS) activity of the active musculature and in power output with cycle-sprint repetitions, while the amount of peripheral quadriceps fatigue incurred at exercise termination was similar

  • In an effort to resolve this issue, innovative approaches have emerged, either based on the determination of the power-EMG relationship during warm-up sprints that are subsequently compared to EMG changes during a RSA test (Bishop, 2012) or based on the comparison of fatigue responses during two sets of repeated sprints separated by a recovery period and matched for initial mechanical output (Mendez-Villanueva et al, 2008)

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Summary

Introduction

Game decisive events are often reliant on transient repeated-sprint ability (RSA), which refers to the ability to produce the best possible average sprint performance over a series of sprints (

Results
Conclusion

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