Journal:Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Key Words:Physical fatigue, mental fatigue, physical-mental fatigue, heart rate variability, cardiac autonomic activity
Abstract:The onset of fatigue disrupts the functioning of the autonomic
nervous system (ANS), potentially elevating the risk of lifethreatening incidents and impairing daily performance. Previous
studies mainly focused on physical fatigue (PF) and mental fatigue (MF) effects on the ANS, with limited knowledge concerning the influence of physical-mental fatigue (PMF) on ANS functionality. This study aimed to assess the immediate impact of
PMF on ANS function and to compare its effects with those of PF
and MF on ANS function. Thirty-six physically active college
students (17 females) without burnout performed 60-min cycling
exercises, AX-Continuous Performance Task (AX-CPT), and cycling combined with AX-CPT to induce PF, MF, and PMF respectively. Subjective fatigue levels were measured using the
Rating of Perceived Exertion scale and the Visual Analog ScaleFatigue. Heart rate variability was measured before and after each
protocol to assess cardiac autonomic function. The proposed tasks
successfully induced PF, MF, and PMF, demonstrated by significant changes in subjective fatigue levels. Compared with baseline, PMF decreased the root mean square of successive differences (RMSSD) between normal heartbeats (P < 0.001, d = 0.50),
the standard deviation of normal-to-normal RR intervals (SDNN)
(P < 0.01, d = 0.33), and the normalized high-frequency (nHF)
power (P < 0.001, d = 0.32) while increased the normalized lowfrequency (nLF) power (P < 0.001, d = 0.35) and the nLF/nHF
ratio (P < 0.001, d = 0.40). Compared with MF, PMF significantly
decreased RMSSD (P < 0.001, η2 = 0.431), SDNN (P < 0.001, η2
= 0.327), nLF (P < 0.01, η2 = 0.201), and nHF (P < 0.001, η2 =
0.377) but not the nLF/nHF ratio. There were no significant differences in ΔHRV (i.e., ΔRMSSD, ΔSDNN, ΔnLF/nHF, ΔnLF,
and ΔnHF), heart rate, and training impulse between PF- and
PMF-inducing protocols. Cognitive performance (i.e., accuracy)
in AX-CPT during the PMF-inducing protocol was significantly
lower than that during the MF-inducing protocol (P < 0.001, η2 =
0.101). PF and PMF increased sympathetic activity and decreased
parasympathetic activity, while MF enhanced parasympathetic
activity.
Indexed by:Journal paper
First-Level Discipline:Physical Education
Document Type:J
Issue:22
Page Number:806-815
Translation or Not:no
Date of Publication:2023-12-01
Included Journals:SCI