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Does respiratory muscle training improve performance in high level athletes? A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. RSPT 572 Supervisor: Dr. Darlene Reid Teryn Buna, Jonathan Coelho, Kyle Freedman, Trevor Morton, Sheree Palmer, Melissa Toy, Cody Walsh. Outline. Background Objective
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Does respiratory muscle training improve performance in high level athletes?A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis RSPT 572 Supervisor: Dr. Darlene Reid Teryn Buna, Jonathan Coelho, Kyle Freedman, Trevor Morton, Sheree Palmer, Melissa Toy, Cody Walsh
Outline • Background • Objective • Methods • Results • Discussion • Conclusions • Implications & Future Directions
Overview • Competition drives top athletes to seek new ways to gain an edge • Top athletes thought to have plateaued their ability to improve: • Muscular function Performance • Cardiovascular function • The role of inspiratory muscles (IM) have recently become a point of consideration in exercise performance research
Respiratory System and Exercise Performance • Traditional • Untrained, healthy respiratory system not a performance limiting factor 1, 3, 4 • Supported by no change in VO2max and lactate thresholds following IMT 2,3 • Focus on O2 transport chain • Current • Systemic physiological changes secondary to inspiratory muscle fatigue (IMF)
Respiratory System and Exercise Performance • IMF occurs 2° to demands of work of breathing in 3-12 • Marathon running • Rowing • Triathlon • Cycling • Swimming
Respiratory System and Exercise Performance • IMF effect on performance • Rating of perceived breathlessness (RPB) 3 • Rating of perceived effort (RPE) 15,16 • Metaboreflex phenomenon • Redirection of blood flow from the periphery to fatiguing IM 13,14 • Can inspiratory muscle training (IMT) have an impact on performance?
IMT and Performance • Debate exists whether IMT can positively contribute to performance • 3 areas of inconsistency: • Reliable and valid methods for measuring ‘performance’ • Variety of IMT protocols and training modalities • Types of athletic performance and level of competition
Tlim vs. TT 3,15,25,31,32
IMT Protocols • Types of IMT modalities 25 • Voluntary Normocapnic Hyperpnea (VNH) • Flow Resistive Loading (FRL) • Pressure Threshold Loading (PTL) • Type of IMT protocol chosen based on 25 • Type of adaptations desired • Factors related to time, cost and ease of use No current gold standard
Athletic Populations • Studies have examined four main types of athletes • Cyclists, rowers and running athletes may TT with IMT 9,27,30 • Swimming may not be as sensitive to IMT 1 Lack of consistent results between and within athletic disciplines
IMT Literature • Other literature on IMT • Systematic Reviews of COPD and Cystic Fibrosis 45,47 • Favourable results • IMT as an effective adjunct to general exercise • 3 narrative reviews of IMT in healthy and athletic populations 3,15,25 • No systematic or statistical analysis Identified a need in the literature for a systematic review of IMT and performance in high level athletes
Objective To conduct a thorough evaluation of the literature and attempt to answer the following questions pertaining to high level athletes: Primary Objective Does IMT improve performance ? Secondary Objectives Does IMT improve IM function ? Which type of athletes or sports benefit most from IMT?
Operational Definitions Inspiratory Muscle Training (IMT): an intervention that used either a VNH, FRL or PTL Healthy: fully able-bodied humans, non-injured and without chronic disease High level: an athlete competing at a varsity, national, international or professional level, OR has a VO2max level designated by Wilmore and Costill, 2005
Search Strategy • Following procedures performed by 2 independent reviewers • Article screening • Title and abstract screening • Screening tool • Inclusion/exclusion criteria • Quality assessment • PEDro scale + • Oxford Level of Evidence + • van Tulder • Data abstraction • Third party reviewer was used when required
Study Inclusion • Articles were included if: (1) Participants were high level, healthy athletes (mean age of 18-40 years) (2) Compared IMT to another comparison group (3) An RCT or crossover study design (4) Includes measures of respiratory muscle adaptation with reliable and valid outcome measures (5) English
Included Studies • 14 articles • Note: Romer et al, 2002A and Romer et al, 2002B same study data • Sports • Cycling • Endurance running • Intermittent sprint: Soccer, Rugby, Field Hockey, Basketball • Rowing • Swimming
Meta-Analysis • RevMan 5.0.24 for meta-analyses48 • Randomized effects model: • Does not assume a common treatment effect exists • Allows for variation by assuming that effects follow a distribution across all studies • Standardized mean differences: Summary statistic when the studies assess the same outcome but measure it in variety of ways • Used to standardize to a uniform scale • Express the size of the intervention effect relative to the variability observed • Equivalent of ‘effect size’ in social science studies
Meta-Analysis • RevMan 5.0.24 48 • Heterogeneity: The extent to which the results of studies are consistent • I2: assesses whether observed differences in results are compatible with chance alone • P <0.1 was considered significant for heterogeneity
Meta-Analysis • Analysis done on primary and secondary outcomes • Sport based sub-group analysis was performed • Cycling • Endurance Running • Intermittent Sprint (Soccer, Rugby, Field Hockey, Basketball) • Rowing • Swimming
Swimming Intermittent Sprint Sports Figure 1: Meta-analysis results comparing targeted or threshold resistive IMT versus sham or control in whole body athletic performance Cycling Rowing Special Forces Overall Performance Favours IMT Favours control/sham
Secondary Outcomes (#) = the number of studies that mentioned the outcome but did not provide numerical data
Summary of Findings • Primary Outcome: • Overall = Meta- analysis found that IMT does have an ergogenic effect on performance Sport based sub-group analysis revealed…. Not all sports are equal! • Intermittent sprint sports and cycling benefited from IMT performance • Swimming, rowing and endurance running were not found to benefit
Discussion • Significance of Primary Outcomes • IMT could be used as an adjunct to regular training to enhance performance in high-level athletes • Only in certain sports disciplines
Discussion • Secondary Outcomes • Improvements in PImax and MVV across all studies • Improvements in RPB across all studies • Significance • Highly trained athletes are able to improve their IM function • All protocols effective in eliciting training effect • Attenuation of dyspnea is supported as a response to improvements in IM function
Discussion • Improvement in performance with cycling and intermittent sprint sports • Correlated with • PImax and MVV • Reduction in RPB
Discussion Why does this not translate to rowing, swimming and endurance running performances? • Rowing 9,52 • Dual function of IM = stabilization of the thorax + ventilation • “Entrained” breathing • Different ventilatory mechanics and IM physiological demands • ? Negate or confound IMT related improvements?
Discussion Why does this not translate to rowing, swimming and endurance running performances? • Swimming 3,33,50 • Respond with smaller in PImax following IMT interventions • IM trained by water submersion • Swimmer IM already near function plateau • Unable to gain performance effects from IMT
Discussion Why does this not translate to rowing, swimming and endurance running performances? • Endurance Runners 51 • German Special Forces = Not elite athletes within a specific sporting discipline • ‘Generalist’ characteristics + non-specific performance test
Discussion Why does this not translate to rowing, swimming and endurance running performances? • Individual characteristics • Each athlete limited by different physiologic or psychologic factors • Some may be more limited by IM function than others • Mix of responders and non-responders within a small sample could affect the effect size
Discussion • Individual characteristics • Highlights the need to consider the unique characteristics of each athlete prior to choosing a training intervention
Discussion • Other secondary measures • FEV1 • VO2 max • Blood lactate • RPE • Consistent with the literature • FEV1 limited by airway diameter not IM strength • VO2 max does not respond to IMT • Blood lactate postulated to decrease • More recent studies have failed to support this argument
Discussion • Lack of positive RPE findings contrasts current literature • Data analyzed on end of test measures • RPE post IMT for similar workouts during incremental testing • Future studies should examine exercise performance measures during fixed workload tasks vs. end-points of exercise performance
Limitations • Small number of studies with sample sizes • Definition of “high-level” athletes • Data abstracted graphs via hand and ruler measurements • McMahon (2002) removed from the analysis • Data could not be reliably extracted from the graph • Attempts to contact the author failed
Conclusion • IMT improves performance in intermittent sprint and cycling NOT rowing, swimming or endurance running • Where IM serve a dual function (rowing) or already stimulated with regular training (swimming) may not benefit vs. sports in which the sole function of the RM is ventilation • High level athletes able to IM function with IMT • Can translate into performance improvements • Limited strength of claim
Implications • Consider IMT as a possible adjunct to regular athletic training • It is cheap and time effective • Must consider the individual characteristics • Must consider type of athletic performance
Future Direction • Call for more, higher quality studies • Studies should examine: • Most effective IMT protocols • Specific sport • Apply IMT in a non-research/field setting with a team/athletic group to determine feasibility and adherence