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Association between thermal responses, medical events, performance, heat acclimation and health status in male and female elite athletes during the 2019 Doha World Athletics Championships

  • Sebastien Racinais*
  • , George Havenith
  • , Polly Aylwin
  • , Mohammed Ihsan
  • , Lee Taylor
  • , Paolo Emilio Adami
  • , Maria Carmen Adamuz
  • , Marine Alhammoud
  • , Juan Manuel Alonso
  • , Nicolas Bouscaren
  • , Sebastian Buitrago
  • , Marco Cardinale
  • , Nicol van Dyk
  • , Chris J. Esh
  • , Josu Gomez-Ezeiza
  • , Frederic Garrandes
  • , Louis Holtzhausen
  • , Mariem Labidi
  • , Gűnter Lange
  • , Alexander Lloyd
  • Sebastien Moussay, Khouloud Mtibaa, Nathan Townsend, Mathew G. Wilson, Stephane Bermon
*Corresponding author for this work
  • Aspetar Orthopaedic and Sports Medicine Hospital
  • Loughborough University
  • National University of Singapore
  • University of Technology Sydney
  • World Athletics
  • Université Côte d'Azur
  • CHU Reunion
  • Inter-University Laboratory of Human Movement Biology
  • Olympic Training and Service Centre Lower Saxony
  • University College London
  • Irish Rugby Football Union
  • Stellenbosch University
  • University of Pretoria
  • GIP Cyceron
  • College of Education

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Purpose To determine associations between thermal responses, medical events, performance, heat acclimation and health status during a World Athletics Championships in hot-humid conditions. Methods From 305 marathon and race-walk starters, 83 completed a preparticipation questionnaire on health and acclimation. Core (Tcore; ingestible pill) and skin (Tskin; thermal camera) temperatures were measured in-competition in 56 and 107 athletes, respectively. 70 in-race medical events were analysed retrospectively. Performance (% personal best) and did not finish (DNF) were extracted from official results. Results Peak Tcore during competition reached 39.6°C±0.6°C (maximum 41.1°C). Tskin decreased from 32.2°C±1.3°C to 31.0°C±1.4°C during the races (p<0.001). Tcore was not related to DNF (25% of starters) or medical events (p≥0.150), whereas Tskin, Tskin rate of decrease and Tcore-to-Tskin gradient were (p≤0.029). A third of the athletes reported symptoms in the 10 days preceding the event, mainly insomnia, diarrhoea and stomach pain, with diarrhoea (9% of athletes) increasing the risk of in-race medical events (71% vs 17%, p<0.001). Athletes (63%) who performed 5–30 days heat acclimation before the competition: ranked better (18±13 vs 28±13, p=0.009), displayed a lower peak Tcore (39.4°C±0.4°C vs 39.8°C±0.7°C, p=0.044) and larger in-race decrease in Tskin (−1.4°C±1.0°C vs −0.9°C±1.2°C, p=0.060), than non-acclimated athletes. Although not significant, they also showed lower DNF (19% vs 30%, p=0.273) and medical events (19% vs 32%, p=0.179). Conclusion Tskin, Tskin rate of decrease and Tcore-to-Tskin gradient were important indicators of heat tolerance. While heat-acclimated athletes ranked better, recent diarrhoea represented a significant risk factor for DNF and in-race medical events.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)439-445
Number of pages7
JournalBritish Journal of Sports Medicine
Volume56
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

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