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Changes in Core Temperature During an Elite Female Rugby Sevens Tournament

Mitchell J. Henderson, Bryna Chrismas, Christopher J. Stevens, Aaron J. Coutts, Lee Taylor

2020International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE: To characterize player core temperature (Tc) across a World Rugby Women's Sevens Series tournament day (WRWSS) and determine the efficacy of commonly employed cold-water-immersion (CWI) protocols. METHODS: Tc was measured in 12 elite female rugby sevens athletes across 3 games (G1-3) from day 1 of the Sydney WRWSS tournament. Symptoms of exertional heat illness, perceptual scales, CWI details, playing minutes, external-load data (measured by global positioning systems), and wet-bulb globe temperature (range 18.5°C-20.1°C) were also collected. Linear mixed models and magnitude-based inferences were used to assess differences in Tc between periods (G1-3 and warm-ups [WU]). RESULTS: Average Tc was "very likely" lower (effect size; ±90% confidence limit -0.33; ±0.18) in G1 than in G2. Peak Tc was "very likely" (0.71; ±0.28) associated with increased playing time. CWI did not remove the accumulated Tc due to WU and match-play activity (∼1°C-2°C rise in Tc still present compared with Tc at WU onset for players ≥6-min match play). CONCLUSIONS: Elite WRWSS athletes experienced high Tc during WU (Tc peak 37.9-39.0°C) and matches (Tc peak 37.9-39.8°C), a magnitude known to reduce intermittent high-intensity physical performance (≥39°C). The CWI protocol resulted in players (≥6-min match play) with ∼1°C to 2°C raised Tc compared with Tc at WU onset.

Topics & Concepts

Wet-bulb globe temperatureCore temperatureDemographyTournamentMathematicsConfidence intervalMedicineAnimal scienceStatisticsInternal medicineHeat stressBiologyCombinatoricsSociologyThermoregulation and physiological responsesInfrared Thermography in MedicineSports Performance and Training
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