Combined effects of sleep deprivation and strenuous exercise on cognitive performances during The North Face® Ultra Trail du Mont Blanc® (UTMB®).

Fiche publication


Date publication

janvier 2015

Journal

Journal of sports sciences

Auteurs

Membres identifiés du Cancéropôle Est :
Pr POUSSEL Mathias


Tous les auteurs :
Hurdiel R, Pezé T, Daugherty J, Girard J, Poussel M, Poletti L, Basset P, Theunynck D

Résumé

This study investigated the effects of combined sleep deprivation and strenuous exercise on cognitive and neurobehavioral performance among long-distance runners completing one of the most difficult ultramarathons in the world. Seventeen runners participated. Each had a wrist-worn actigraph throughout the race to record their sleep time. In addition, each individual's performance in 10-min response-time tests before and after the race was recorded and a questionnaire enabled participants to report any difficulties they experienced during the competition. During race completion times of 27 to 44 h, combined acute lack of sleep (12 ± 17 min of rest during the race) and strenuous exercise (168.0 km) had marked adverse effects on cognitive performances ranging from mere lengthening of response time to serious symptoms such as visual hallucinations. This study suggests that regardless of rest duration and time in race, cognitive performances of ultramarathoners are adversely affected.

Mots clés

individual differences, performance, sleep, ultraendurance

Référence

J Sports Sci. 2015 ;33(7):670-4