Influence of Different Methods of Respiratory Muscle Training on Athletic Performance and Pulmonary Function in Short-track Speedskaters
Sponsored by Institute of Sport - National Research Institute, Poland
About this trial
Last updated 2 years ago
Study ID
TK01/2023
Status
Enrolling by invitation
Type
Interventional
Phase
N/A
Placebo
No
Accepting
18 to 30 Years
All
Not accepting
Healthy Volunteers
Trial Timing
Ended 2 years ago
What is this trial about?
This research aims to explore the impact of two distinct methods of respiratory muscle
training, voluntary isocapnic hyperpnoea (VIH) and inspiratory pressure threshold loading
(IPTL), on athletic performance and pulmonary function in short-track speedkaters. The
study will employ a parallel group-randomized trial design and will span a period of six
weeks, during which participants will undergo regular, partially supervised training
sessions.
The primary objective of the research is to assess the changes in athletic performance
resulting from respiratory muscle training using VIH and IPTL techniques. Athletic
performance will be measured through a range of standardized performance tests relevant
to the participants' specific sporting activities (Wingate Test, CPET, on-ice time-trial
performance). Pulmonary function will be measured by spirometry examination.
The group will consist of healthy, highly-trained professional short-track speedskaters.
What are the participation requirements?
Inclusion Criteria
- valid medical certificate to compete sports professionally,
- lack of ongoing medication intake,
- lack of any medical condition,
- lack of previous experience with RMT,
- performance caliber corresponding to at Elite/World Class (Participant Classification Framework, McKay 2022).
Exclusion Criteria
- any ongoing medication intake or medical condition.