The influence of sleep and training load on illness in nationally competitive male Australian Football athletes: A cohort study over one season

Objectives: To determine the incidence of illness, and identify the relationship between sleep, training load and illness in nationally competitive Australian football athletes. Second, to assess multivariate effect between training load and/or sleep variables. Design: Cohort study. Methods: Retrospective analyses of prospectively collected cohort data were conducted on forty-four male athletes over a 46-week season. The primary outcome was illness incidence, recorded daily by medical doctors. Independent variables were acute, chronic and acute:chronic ratios of: sleep quality, sleep quantity, internal training load and external training load defined as: total running distance, high speed running distance and sprint distance. Generalised estimating equations using Poisson (count) models were fit to examine both univariate and multivariate associations between independent variables and illness incidence. Results: 67 incidences of illness were recorded, with an incidence rate of 11 illnesses per 1000 running hours. Univariate analysis showed acute and chronic sleep hours and quality, as well as acute sprint and total running distance to be significantly associated with illness. Multivariate analysis identified that only acute sleep quantity was significantly, negatively associated with illness incidence (OR 0.49, CI 0.25-0.94) once all univariate significant variables were controlled for. There was no relationship between external training load and illness when sleep metrics were controlled for. Conclusions: In a cohort of Australian football athletes, whose load was well monitored, reduced sleep quantity was associated with increased incidence of illness within the next 7 days. Monitoring sleep parameters may assist in identifying individuals at risk of illness. ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR
© Copyright 2019 Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport. Elsevier. All rights reserved.

Bibliographic Details
Subjects:
Notations:biological and medical sciences sport games
Published in:Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport
Language:English
Published: 2019
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsams.2018.06.011
Volume:22
Issue:2
Pages:130-134
Document types:article
Level:advanced